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Mother Pelican
A Journal of Solidarity and Sustainability

Vol. 18, No. 2, February 2022
Luis T. Gutiérrez, Editor
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Life in a Degrowth Economy and Why You'll Love It

Erin Remblance

This article has been published by
Independent Australia, 26 September 2021,
Medium, 20 October 2021, and Resilience, 13 January 2022,
The original version of this article was published in Independent Australia


22.02.Page5.Remblance.jpg
Photo credit: Elena Mozhvilo via Unsplash ~ Click the image to enlarge.


Exploring a set of policies designed to optimize human and planetary wellbeing.

Degrowth is a conscious set of policies designed to optimize human and planetary wellbeing while minimizing inequality, poverty and environmental harm. It’s recognition that ‘more’ doesn’t mean better and that, despite decades of economic growth, on average we aren’t happier. Degrowth acknowledges that economic growth in predominately western nations has come at the expense of so-called ‘developing nations’ and at a tremendous cost to the planet and its ability to sustain life— and now we are on the brink of an unimaginable catastrophe.

We’ve all grown up in a society where growth is good, and not growing — recession — is bad. Recession means unemployment, financial hardship, increasing poverty. Why would anyone choose that? But degrowth isn’t recession. So, what could a world not obsessed with gross domestic product (GDP) growth look like? In his book, Less is More, Jason Hickel advocates for many policies, including:

  • ending planned obsolescence on products such as household appliances, technological devices, furniture, houses, cars etcetera;
  • cutting advertising;
  • shifting from ownership to usership — think of all of the ‘stuff’ we all own that spends most of the year idle, especially cars;
  • ending food waste;
  • scaling down ecologically destructive industries such as fossil fuels, beef, private jets, arms, single use plastics, fast fashion, disposable coffee cups, oversized new house builds, new stadiums for Olympic Games & World Cups, the commercial airline industry, industries with long distance supply chains, etc;
  • shorter working weeks and job guarantees across the entire labour force;
  • decommodifying public goods & expanding public services including healthcare, education, public transport, affordable housing, basic quotas of energy, water and internet, public libraries, parks & sports grounds;
  • having governments create money rather than banks, and the government spending it into existence rather than lending it into existence like the banks currently do;
  • reducing income and wealth inequality;
  • debt cancellation.

In short, life in a degrowth economy would involve less work, and more time together. Less individual ownership and more sharing. Less debt and more services provided by the government to everyone. It’s a ‘back to basics’ approach with more time in nature doing things we enjoy with people we enjoy, less time working to pay for things that we don’t need or use very often. We have more meaning in our lives because we have a greater sense of community, co-operation, and connection, rather than the current focus on individualism and perpetually trying to find happiness through our next purchase.

The things we create will be built to last and not replaced far too soon in the name of economic growth. We will become more than a ‘human resource’ existing purely to create more and more capital. In a degrowth economy we will have the time, space and security to explore the as-yet untapped parts of our humanness. Knowing that our basic needs are covered and having a more equal distribution of wealth and income will mean the social anxiety of needing to ‘keep up with the Joneses’ will lessen and our social bonds will strengthen. We would value different things in a degrowth economy and define success differently. A degrowth economy does not need to mean a degrowth lifestyle — indeed we could be richer for it.

It has been widely noted that degrowth will be politically hard to achieve. But why? Climate change is a huge motivator to pursue a degrowth economy, but we should be pursuing it anyway — it is entirely rational to maximize the wellbeing of people and planet rather than simply focusing on the growth in the value of financial transactions in an economy.

Embracing a degrowth economy will require a huge cultural shift. In fact, we probably need to ‘decolonize’ our minds and start thinking like Indigenous cultures who make decisions with the next seven generations in mind. The Australian government doesn’t make decisions with the next generation in mind, let alone several generations. But don’t be fooled into thinking that this is the human condition, and that we are a greedy, selfish species. It’s simply not true. Neoliberalism — and the artificial scarcity that capitalism thrives upon — does bring out that side. It’s why we have a government in power today that still refuses to sign up to even the least controversial of climate targets of net-zero by 2050. But it is only one side of us, and we also have immense capabilities to cooperate and care for each other. Indeed, contrary to popular belief, ecological economist Tim Jackson argues that it is co-operation, rather than competition, that has enabled us to evolve as a species.

If you think that creating this cultural shift is near impossible, wait until you hear about the technology we are relying on instead. Not a single one of the 222 scenarios in the IPCC Special Report into 1.5 degrees of warming projects a declining GDP trajectory; in fact they all project continued GDP growth. Simultaneously they all rely on controversial amounts of carbon dioxide removal and/or unprecedented technological changes. It seems imprudent, absurd even, to rely upon technology that “faces substantial uncertainty, as well as sustainability and feasibility concerns” — rather than reduce our emissions today. Consider that if the wealthiest 10 percent, who are responsible for half of all global emissions, were to reduce their emissions to that of the average European (hardly subsistence living) we could cut emissions by a third and we could do this relatively quickly.

There are many good reasons to embrace a degrowth economy, not the least of which being that we can achieve greater meaning and happiness in our lives. But perhaps the most important reason to embrace degrowth is because the future doesn’t look like today. Our choice isn’t ‘more of the same’ or degrowth. There is no option to keep growing the economy and the material footprint that can’t be decoupled from that economy. We can either choose degrowth and actively work towards it, or we choose collapse by continuing with business as usual.

The original version of this article was published in Independent Australia under a CC license.

Find out more about the Post Growth Institute on our website.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Erin Remblance is a Sydney-based mother-of-three. She is currently working in carbon reduction and studying wellbeing economies.


"It is as fatal as it is cowardly to blink facts
because they are not to our taste."


— John Tyndall, 1820-1893

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