
Making Nature Count
Author(s) -
Umesh Srinivasan,
Kartik Shanker
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ecology, economy and society--the insee journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2581-6152
pISSN - 2581-6101
DOI - 10.37773/ees.v4i2.463
Subject(s) - biodiversity , exploit , natural resource economics , natural resource , extinction (optical mineralogy) , gross domestic product , economics , natural (archaeology) , geography , development economics , environmental resource management , ecology , economic growth , biology , paleontology , computer security , archaeology , computer science
Earth’s biodiversity is the ultimate engine of local and global economies and compromising the renewability of our natural resources will ultimately halt economic growth. Despite this, humankind has continued to exploit natural resources such as fisheries and forests at highly unsustainable rates in the pursuit of flawed development paradigms and simplistic metrics such as gross domestic product (GDP). This has already led to the loss of natural habitats and the decline and extinction of species as well as consequences such as an increase in zoonotic pandemics. The Economics of Biodiversity, a recent report by Sir Partha Dasgupta, addresses how the failure of our current institutions has brought us to where we stand and suggests ways by which we may reform our economic thought to mitigate the impacts on biodiversity. The report identifies important first steps: changing the way we measure economic “success”...