ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Comprehending ecological and economic sustainability
Comparative analysis of stability principles in the biosphere and free market economy
Article first published online: 14 MAY 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05400.x
© 2010 New York Academy of Sciences
Issue

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Volume 1195, S1 Ecological Complexity and Sustainability pages E1–E18, May 2010
Additional Information
How to Cite
Makarieva, A. M., Gorshkov, V. G. and Li, B.-L. (2010), Comprehending ecological and economic sustainability. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1195: E1–E18. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05400.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 14 MAY 2010
- Article first published online: 14 MAY 2010
- Abstract
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Keywords:
- biomass;
- civilization;
- climate;
- consumption;
- cost price;
- economic growth;
- economics;
- ecosystem;
- employment;
- energy;
- environment;
- forest;
- Lyapunov function;
- living standard;
- oil;
- population number;
- production;
- retirement age;
- technological progress;
- poverty threshold;
- saturation;
- working hours
The global environmental imperative demands urgent actions on ecological stabilization, yet the global scale of such actions is persistently insufficient. This calls for investigating why the world economy appears to be so fearful of any potential environmental expenditure. Using the formalism of Lyapunov potential function it is shown that the stability principles for biomass in the ecosystem and for employment in economics are mathematically similar. The ecosystem has a stable and unstable stationary state with high (forest) and low (grasslands) biomass, respectively. In economics, there is a stable stationary state with high employment in mass production of conventional goods sold at low cost price, and an unstable stationary state with lower employment in production of novel products of technological progress sold at higher prices. An additional stable state is described for economics with very low employment in production of life essentials, such as energy and raw materials that are sold at greatly inflated prices. In this state the civilization pays 10% of global GDP for energy produced by a negligible minority of the working population (currently ∼0.2%) and sold at prices exceeding the cost price by 40 times, a state when any extra expenditures of whatever nature appear intolerable. The reason lies in the fundamental shortcoming of economic theory, which allows for economic ownership over energy sources. This is shown to be equivalent to equating measurable variables of different dimensions (stores and fluxes), which leads to effective violation of the laws of energy and matter conservation in modern economics.

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