Book Review
An Economic Approach to Saving the
Environment (and Ourselves)
The
Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism, the Environment, and Crossing
from Crisis to Sustainability
byJames
Gustave Speth. Yale University Press, www.yalebooks.com. 2008. 295 pages.
$28.
“All we have to
do to destroy the planet’s climate and biota and leave a ruined world to
our children and grandchildren is to keep doing exactly what we are doing
today, with no growth in the human population or the world economy.”
So states James
Gustave Speth, dean of Yale University’s School of Forestry and
Environmental Studies, in his new book,
The
Bridge at the Edge of
the
World.
He argues that the devastation of the natural world is inextricably linked
to the rampant overconsumption of resources in an increasingly successful
global economy. The solution, therefore, is to transform the most
destructive features of capitalism (such as unbridled corporate power and
consumerism’s flawed ideology that one can gain happiness through acquiring
material possessions) in order to prevent environmental disaster.
A former White
House advisor and founder of the World Resources Institute, a nonprofit
environmental think tank, Speth believes that the global economy is
increasing at an unsustainable rate. Corporations and wealthy industrialized
countries bear much of the blame for resource depletion, and they are
continuing to exploit natural resources at a dangerous pace. “The planet
cannot sustain capitalism as we know it,” Speth maintains. It’s time to
transition into what he terms a “post-growth society.”
There are ways
to reform the current capitalist model so that the market both protects and
restores the environment. The solution requires multiple approaches, such as
market-based incentives and stronger environmental regulations, including
government regulation of large corporations. Speth argues that we must do
away with market fundamentalist approaches and begin to hold large
corporations accountable to society, not just to their shareholders. Calling
for more environmentally friendly products is one of the first steps that
consumers can take.
“Even at levels
of consumption that are high and growing,” Speth writes, “consumers can at
least insist on two green things. First, they can shift purchases to
products and services where the making and the use of the product are
carried out in a more environmentally friendly way. And second, they can
insist that provisions be made for the recycling and reuse of consumer
products.” Yet, instead of simply being content to follow the current trend
of “green consumerism,” people must also reduce the amount that they
consume. In other words, not buying paper towels is still a better
alternative than switching to a “forest-friendly” brand.
Speth also takes
on the mainstream environmental movement in which he has been a leading
figure for the past four decades. He argues that it has failed to
substantially protect the environment by working within the system, and that
a new approach is necessary. In other words, if trying to create change from
within the system doesn’t work, then it’s time to change the system. Speth
argues that, since corporations dominate the U.S. government as well as its
economy, the only possible realistic solution is for the public to take on
more responsibility and demand greater corporate accountability. Throughout
the book, the environmental movement’s “ultimate insider” asserts that we
must mobilize people on the outside, starting at the grassroots level, if
any real progress is to be made.
Are these
solutions hopelessly idealistic and impossible to achieve? Speth’s
passionate argument is convincing— it can be done, but it will require a
great deal of effort. Speth sees two possible futures, two paths that
humanity can choose to take: the one that we’re currently on, which leads
straight into the abyss, and another, which bridges the divide and leads us
toward a more sustainable future. —Aaron
M. Cohen
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