Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword: Realising Hope
- Introduction: Building Better Futures
- 1 Making Globalisation Work
- 2 Energy: A Better Life with a Healthy Planet
- 3 Are Major Wars More Likely in the Future?
- 4 The Future of Work
- 5 Digital Technologies: Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining
- 6 Cities to the Rescue: A New Scale for Dealing with Climate Change
- 7 The Future of Global Poverty
- 8 Transcending Boundaries: The Realistic Hope for Water
- 9 Health Systems: Doomed to Fail or About to Be Saved by a Copernican Shift?
- 10 Seeding the Future: Challenges to Global Food Systems
- 11 The Great Livestock Trade-off: Food Production, Poverty Alleviation, and Climate Change
- 12 Rethinking Economics for Global Challenges
- 13 Leadership and the Future of Democratic Societies
- 14 Prototyping the Future: A New Approach to Whole-of-Society Visioning
- Five Principles of Realistic Hope
- Epilogue: From the Eclipse of Utopia to the Restoration of Hope
- Acknowledgements
- Name Index
- Subject Index
- Endorsements for Realistic Hope
12 - Rethinking Economics for Global Challenges
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword: Realising Hope
- Introduction: Building Better Futures
- 1 Making Globalisation Work
- 2 Energy: A Better Life with a Healthy Planet
- 3 Are Major Wars More Likely in the Future?
- 4 The Future of Work
- 5 Digital Technologies: Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining
- 6 Cities to the Rescue: A New Scale for Dealing with Climate Change
- 7 The Future of Global Poverty
- 8 Transcending Boundaries: The Realistic Hope for Water
- 9 Health Systems: Doomed to Fail or About to Be Saved by a Copernican Shift?
- 10 Seeding the Future: Challenges to Global Food Systems
- 11 The Great Livestock Trade-off: Food Production, Poverty Alleviation, and Climate Change
- 12 Rethinking Economics for Global Challenges
- 13 Leadership and the Future of Democratic Societies
- 14 Prototyping the Future: A New Approach to Whole-of-Society Visioning
- Five Principles of Realistic Hope
- Epilogue: From the Eclipse of Utopia to the Restoration of Hope
- Acknowledgements
- Name Index
- Subject Index
- Endorsements for Realistic Hope
Summary
Abstract
This chapter tries to check the wisdom of ‘standard’ economics against global megatrends, such as globalisation, digitalisation, and other future technologies, as well as ecological challenges. The result is rather negative. For many aspects of these new developments, standard economics isn't able to give the necessary description of the upcoming ‘new world’. Given this diagnosis, the policy recipes derived from standard economics for expected economic and societal problems will not fly. The chapter discusses the need for a paradigm change in economics and for more interdisciplinary
work, and explores possible avenues of progress.
Keywords: failure of standard economics, holistic versus restricted approaches, paradigm change, crises of capitalism
The challenges to the practice of economics in the new global economy
The global economy is experiencing rapid worldwide upheaval. The radical changes taking place are also leading to greater insecurity and inequality, while populism and nationalism are on the rise. Advanced OECD economies, especially those that have no raw materials, must examine whether their economic model is sustainable in the long term. Both emerging countries and developing countries need to develop quickly, raising living standards and well-being while encouraging inclusiveness and open societies.
This upheaval has to be seen in conjunction with emerging megatrends, including those that lie outside economics, such as continuing digitalisation and the challenge of climate change. These megatrends can create great opportunities for countries – but at the same time, the associated risks and difficulties must be taken seriously.
In the last two centuries, starting with Adam Smith and David Ricardo, economic policy and piecemeal economic ‘engineering’, backed up by economic theory within the typical rationalistic and instrumentalist methodological approaches, have been very influential in shaping these processes. There is no standstill in the development of theories and of better and more sophisticated analytical tools to conduct empirical research and create evidence-based policy advice. But there is an important question: is this piecemeal engineering approach sufficient and the only thing we can do or realistically hope for? Or do we need a fundamental rethinking of economics in a more holistic and less imperialistic mode so that it can be much more helpful in shaping the future, with better policies for better lives?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Realistic HopeFacing Global Challenges, pp. 203 - 218Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018