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Ecological Macroeconomics: An application to climate changeRezai, Armon, Taylor, Lance, Mechler, Reinhard 01 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Ecological Economics has not paid sufficient attention to the macroeconomic level both in terms of theory and modeling. Yet, key topics debated in the field of Ecological Economics such as sustainable consumption, reduction in working time, the degrowth debate, the energy-exergy link, and the rebound effect require a holistic and macro perspective. While this deficiency has been identified before and Keynesian economics has been generally suggested as a potent vehicle to establish economic system's thinking, very little concrete theorizing and practical suggestions have been put forward. We give further credence to this suggestion and demonstrate the value of tackling key concerns of Ecological Economics within a Keynesian growth framework. Contextualized by an application to climate change we suggest that policy relevant recommendations need to be based on a consistent view of the macroeconomy. We end with laying out key building blocks for a Keynesian model framework for an Ecological Macroeconomics. (authors' abstract)
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Ecological Macroeconomics: An application to climate changeRezai, Armon, Taylor, Lance, Mechler, Reinhard 17 April 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Ecological Economics has not paid sufficient attention to the
macroeconomic level both in terms of theory and modelling. Yet, key
topics debated in the field of Ecological Economics such as sustainable
consumption, reduction in working time, the degrowth debate, the
energy-exergy link, and the rebound effect require a wholistic and
macro perspective. While this deficiency has been identified before and
Keynesian economics has been generally suggested as a potent vehicle
to establish economic system's thinking, very little concrete theorizing
and practical suggestions have been put forward. We give further
credence to this suggestion and demonstrate the value of tackling key
concerns of Ecological Economics within a Keynesian growth
framework. Contextualized by an application to climate change we
suggest that policy relevant recommendations need to be based on a
consistent view of the macroeconomy. We end with laying out key
building blocks for a Keynesian model framework for an Ecological
Macroeconomics. (author's abstract) / Series: SRE - Discussion Papers
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