The Hidden Messages Within
Sustainable Development
Sharon Beder
Cooption of
Language |
Shift of
Priorities 1 |
Shift of
Priorities 2 |
Shift of
Priorities 3
Hidden
Assumptions |
Hidden
Agendas |
Future
Visions
Many of the key voices in the drive for
sustainable development have an agenda that most
environmentalists would not accept were it made
explicit. For this reason environmentalists should
be wary of grasping onto what seems to be common
ground in the fight to protect the planet without
first examining the implications of such
liaisons.
Sustainable development is not about giving
priority to environmental concerns, it is about
incorporating environmental assets into the
economic system to ensure the sustainability of the
economic system. Sustainable development
encompasses the idea that the loss of environmental
amenity can be substituted for by wealth creation;
that putting a price on the environment will help
us protect it unless degrading it is more
profitable; that the 'free' market is the best way
of allocating environmental resources; that
businesses should base their decisions about
polluting behaviour on economic considerations and
the quest for profit; that economic growth is
necessary for environmental protection and
therefore should take priority over it.
1. Cooption of Language
Sustainable development represents a cooption of
the term sustainability which once represented
ideas of stability and equilibrium and harmony with
nature. In the late 1960s and early 1970s the term
was used in the context of the limits to growth
debate as part of the argument against economic and
population growth. For example the editors of the
magazine The Ecologist argued that economic growth
could not continue on into the future without
disaster:
The principal defect of the industrial
way of life with its ethos of expansion is that
it is not sustainable... By now it should be
clear that the main problems of the environment
do not arise from temporary and accidental
malfunctions of existing economic and social
systems. On the contrary, they are the warning
signs of a profound incompatibility between
deeply rooted beliefs in continuous growth and
the dawning recognition of the earth as a space
ship, limited in its resources and vulnerable to
thoughtless mishandling.
In contrast, advocates of sustainable
development in the 1980s sought to find ways of
making economic growth sustainable, mainly through
technological change. In 1982 the British
government began using the term sustainability to
refer to sustainable economic expansion rather than
the sustainable use of resources. Third World
environmental activist Mohamed Idris argues,
The term 'sustainable' from the
ecological point of view means the maintenance
of the integrity of the ecology. It means a
harmonious relation between humanity and nature,
that is, harmony in the interaction between
individual human beings and in their interaction
with natural resources.
The term 'sustainable' from the point of view of
non-ecological elites means 'how to continue to
sustain the supply of raw materials when the
existing sources of raw materials run out.'
The term development is also ambiguous and in
the context of sustainable development, development
is a synonym for economic development, and
therefore economic growth. The editor of the
environmental science journal, Ambio, Arno
Rosemarin, wrote in April 1990:
The two words sustainable and
development are in a strict sense contradictory.
Sustainable implies the elements of long-term
renewal, maintenance, recycling, minimal raw
material exploitation and management of people's
needs on a collective basis. Development can be
interpreted in many different ways but according
to our present industrial-based culture it
implies short-term planning, minimal
maintenance, waste, maximal exploitation of raw
materials and emphasis on the individual.
With this change in conception of sustainability
and the focus on economic development has come a
more pervasive use of economic language in
environmental discussions. Much of the discussion
of sustainable development describes nature and the
environment in economic terms, as natural resources
or natural capital, and the community's stock of
assets. Margaret Thatcher, former Prime Minister of
Britain, has described environmental protection in
these terms: "no generation has a freehold on the
earth. All that we have is a life tenancy - with
full repairing lease".
The extent of the takeover of the environmental
agenda by economists was indicated by a speaker at
an OECD workshop in 1990 who observed: 'one can
track the evolution of environmental concern over
twenty years by watching it move from the back page
of major newspapers to the front page, and now to
the financial page'.
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2. Shift of Priorities 1 -
Environment as Part of Economic System
Sustainable development means incorporating the
environment into the economic system. David Pearce
and his colleagues, in their report on sustainable
development to Margaret Thatcher, the British Prime
Minister at the time, said that the principles of
sustainable development meant recognising that
'resources and environments serve economic
functions and have positive economic value.'
Considered as a component of the economic system,
the environment is seen to provide raw materials
for production and to be a receptacle for wastes
from production.
D.J.Thampapillai, a lecturer in Economics at
Macquarie University says in his text on
Environmental Economics;
Clearly, the natural environment is an
important component of the economic system, and
without the natural environment the economic
system would not be able to function. Hence, we
need to treat the natural environment in the
same way as we treat labour and capital; that
is, as an asset and a resource.
David James, as Commissioner of the Commonwealth
Government Resource Assessment Commission has
said:
With better management of natural
resources we could obtain a larger supply and
wider range of goods and services. This is the
central notion of sustainable development. It
involves making decisions about the optimal
composition of the economy's capital stock,
including human capital, man-made capital and
natural resource stocks. We should be attempting
to manipulate the total capital stock in such a
way that the welfare of society is maximised.
Whilst James, as an economist, puts forward an
obviously economic definition of sustainable
development, the usual definition by the Brundtland
Commission - "development that meets the needs of
the present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs" - is
not so different. James points out that economists
are interested in the environment to the extent it
can ensure a continuous supply of goods and
services to meet human wants and this seems to be
the intent of the Brundtland Commission's
definition of sustainable development which makes
no specific mention of the environment.
When viewed in this way, as a source of inputs
and a sink for outputs of the economic system, the
protection of the environment moves to a secondary
and indeed supplementary position with respect to
economic goals. Sustainability becomes a problem of
how to sustain the economic functions of the
environment rather than how to sustain the
environment. And this means that sustainable
development may curb the worst instances of
environmental degradation when they are foreseen
but in the event of a clash between economic and
environmental goals, economic goals will take
precedence.
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3. Shift in Priorities II -
Primacy of the Market
If the environment is a set of resources for the
economic system then, economists argue, the market
is the most efficient way of allocating those
resources:
Any economist will tell you that the
environment really ought to be classified as a
resource; hence it should fall fairly and
squarely into the policy arena concerning the
allocation of resources. Management of the
environment is essentially an economic problem.
Economists argue that environmental degradation
has resulted from the failure of the market system
to put any value on the environment, even though
the environment does serve economic functions and
provides economic and other benefits. It is argued
that because environmental 'assets' are free or
underpriced they tend to be overused or abused,
resulting in environmental damage. Because they are
not owned and do not have price tags then there is
no incentive to protect them. This is a view shared
by business people. The Business Council of
Australia argues that it is not economic growth
that is the real problem;
Rather, it is that important
environmental assets tend not to be priced in a
market like other assets. These assets are
common property - they belong to everybody, and
to nobody. Without ownership rights there is not
the incentive for any person or group to look
after them properly... if the environment has a
zero price to users it will eventually be used
up.
In order to fix this perceived problem,
sustainable development involves putting a price on
the environment and charging people to use it,
privatising the commons, and creating artificial
markets and price mechanisms through economic
instruments and tradeable rights to pollute. The
idea is that "the power of the market can be
harnessed" to environmental goals.
However, the real problem is not that the
environment is not privately owned or valued on the
market but rather that economic considerations take
priority in most countries around the world. The
tragedy of the commons is not that there are
commons but rather the freedom of the commons. The
lack of legal sanctions combined with a value
system that promotes the raising of individual
economic interest to a primary decision-making
principle is what destroys the commons.
Seen in this light, economic instruments,
privatisation and environmental 'valuation' are all
mechanisms for perpetuating the central problems
that caused environmental degradation in the first
place. They ensure priority is still given to
economic goals and they enable individuals and
firms to make decisions that affect others on the
basis of their own economic interests. The primacy
of 'free' markets in environmental decision-making
ensures that power remains in the hands of those
who direct and control financial resources; the
wealthy, the corporations and the economists they
employ.
Vandana Shiva, an Indian activist, points out
that sustainability should require that markets and
production process be reshaped to fit nature's
logic rather than "the logic of profits and capital
accumulation, and returns on investment"
determining nature's fate. Instead, she says,
sustainable development "protects the primacy of
capital. It is still assumed that capital is the
basis of all activity."
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4. Shift in Priorities III -
Economic Growth Before Environment
Sustainable development obliterates the argument
that economic growth and environmental protection
are incompatible by asserting that we can have
both. In fact the Canadian environmental group
Green Web suggests that the concept of sustainable
development is an "ideological cover or
legitimization for greatly expanded economic
growth; hence expanded or accelerated environmental
destruction."
Those environmentalists who favour sustainable
development tend to bow out of this debate over
whether economic growth is desirable or not.
Australian mainstream groups have differentiated
between growth and development and prefer the term
"Ecologically Sustainable Development" to
Sustainable Development because it "emphasises the
qualitative aspects of development, as opposed to
the traditional emphasis on quantitative
growth."
The Commission For the Future argues:
Rather than growth or no-growth, as the
debate about environment and development has
sometimes been cast, the central issue is what
kind of growth. The challenge of sustainable
development is to find new products, processes,
and technologies which are environmentally
friendly while they deliver the things we want.
In theory economic growth could probably be
achieved without additional impacts on the
environment but this would mean many activities
that might otherwise provide economic growth would
have to be foregone and this will not happen whilst
priority is given to achieving economic growth.
Because some environmental groups are concerned to
appear reasonable, cooperative and not
anti-development, they do not debate the merits of
economic growth whilst business groups still push
it as a social priority. For example, the
International Chamber of Commerce argues:
Economic growth provides the conditions
in which protection of the environment can be
achieved, and environmental protection, in
balance with other human goals, is necessary to
achieve growth that is sustainable....
Business thus shares the view that there should
be a common goal, not a conflict, between economic
development and environmental protection, both now
and for future generations.
Such views have also been reiterated by the
Australian Ecologically Sustainable Development
Working Groups. The Manufacturing Group argues that
economic growth provides the resources for the new
"cleaner" technologies, the capital to invest in
"green" products and the leisure to enjoy them, not
to mention an enhanced quality of life for all
Australians.
Because so many environmentalists are ready to
give way on the issue of economic growth and deny
there is a conflict, environmental protection must
be argued in terms of its contribution to economic
growth. When the inevitable conflicts come up in
particular instances, the environment will only be
protected where the economic costs are not
perceived to be too high.
The Commonwealth Government, in its 1990
discussion paper on sustainable development, argues
that it is the role of governments to resolve
conflicts between economic growth and environmental
protection as they arise. It argues that;
it is necessary to evaluate the risk to
future economic prospects if business investment
and growth is prevented or discouraged. In some
cases it may be worthwhile paying the price of
some environmental damage to ensure present and
future economic benefits. This will be
particularly relevant in commercial development
of non-renewable resources, where at least some
transient impact on the environment is
inevitable.
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5. Hidden Assumptions -
Substitutability of Capital For Nature
So long as the environment is seen to be a set
of resources and assets that feed the economic
system and economic growth has priority, then it
makes sense to believe that substitutes can be
found when some of these resources and assets run
out or are damaged. Vandana Shiva argues that the
fallacy of "the non-destructibility of capital and
the substitutability of capital and nature"
preserves the sanctity of economic growth:
since industrial raw materials and
market commodities have substitutes,
sustainability is translated into
substitutability of materials, which is further
translated into convertibility into profits and
cash.
This notion of substitutability is inherent in
the idea of 'valuing' the environment and also
economic instruments. The way that environmental
concerns are to be integrated into economic
decisions is by estimating the monetary value of
the environmental damage that an activity might do
and weighing such costs against the benefits of
going ahead anyway. This assumes that the financial
and other gains from a project can make up for
these environmental losses, that they are in some
way substitutable for one another.
Likewise the argument for incorporating monetary
estimates of environmental loss in measures of GNP
also assumes that "natural capital" and "human
capital" are interchangeable. The implicit premise
is that such a modified GNP measure will then
reflect increasing welfare as long as the total
capital, natural plus human, increases. Accepting a
GNP figure modified in this way means accepting
that loss of nature can be made up for by
corresponding increases in wealth.
Finally, economic instruments give individuals
and firms the choice of paying charges or
preventing pollution as if one were substitutable
for the other. The purpose of pollution charges,
for example, is to internalise environmental costs
so that they become part of a firm's profit
calculations like the costs of labour, materials
and services that they obtain on the market. The
firm can then choose to reduce those environmental
costs by reducing their pollution. On the other
hand the firm may chose to reduce other costs
instead, for example labour costs.
The purpose of giving environmental 'resources'
a price is so that they will be valued in the same
way that other resources that are on the market are
valued. Some environmentalists may be reassured
that this means more account will be taken of the
environment. On the other hand, this can be seen as
a devaluation of the environment because it brings
it down to the same level as other commodities that
can be bought and sold. Its value is reduced to an
economic value and it is then treated as a
substitutable part of the economic system.
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6. Hidden Agendas - Consensus
Vs Change
Sustainable development is an attempt to reduce
the politics in decision-making by artificially
replacing conflict with consensus, by emphasising
technocratic decision-making processes such as
cost-benefit analysis and economic instruments, and
by ensuring environmental conflicts are
increasingly decided by the market. Such moves will
increase business autonomy, free market ideology
and the power of those with money to make decisions
affecting the environment.
For economists, politicians, business people and
others, the concept of sustainable development
offers the opportunity to overcome previous
differences and conflicts by forging a new
consensus that environmental protection and
economic development can go hand in hand. Instead
of being seen as contributing to environmental
problems, as they were in 1970, technology and
industry are now seen to provide the solutions to
those problems.
Sustainable development is an attempt at
conflict resolution which has spawned a number of
consensus decision making processes including the
Ecologically Sustainable Development process in
Australia. This involved nine working groups
representing a range of interest groups sitting
down at the table together and examining ways of
achieving sustainable development in different
industry sectors.
This consensus approach favoured the status quo
because change had to be agreed to by all parties
to meet the consensus criterion. Radical change
rarely emerges from such a process. The consensus
approach also favours the status quo by taking the
discussion behind closed doors. In the case of the
ESD process, admission was limited to chosen
representatives of recognised interest groups who
had faith in the process. Environmentalists were
therefore represented by two mainstream
environmental groups and more radical
environmentalists were marginalised. Public
discussion was severely reduced by inadequate
public consultation procedures and because
disagreements between the parties only appeared
publicly as unsupported recommendations in the
reports which appeared at the end of the
process.
The reduction in public participation in
environmental decision-making combined with the
renewed emphasis on economic growth and the
incorporation of the environment into the economic
system will ensure that business can go on as usual
but it is also likely that the environment will
continue to deteriorate. The imperative that
environmental deterioration might once have had for
social and political change has been dissipated by
the cleverly constructed notion of sustainable
development.
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7. Future Visions
Whilst the public is led to believe that
sustainable development can achieve environmental
protection, opportunities to discuss possible
alternative futures are minimised. Why look for
something else if you think the existing system can
be adapted to solve the problem? It is the lack of
discussion about possible futures that reinforces
the idea that the present system is the only
feasible option in the minds of many people. It
means that few people are willing or able to
envisage alternative futures. Those alternatives
that do come up, often have not been subject to
rigorous questioning outside small groups of like
minded people. They are too easily knocked down
whenever they do occasionally emerge, half-formed,
to face the harsh light of day.
I do not believe that universally attractive,
sensible visions of the future can be developed
without wide discussion and that discussion will
not happen until there is wide acceptance that the
prevailing paradigm represents an undesirable
future. This means facing up to the reality that
sustainable development is a con trick, a way of
perpetuating outdated paradigms. Sustainable
development rests on the assumption that the quest
for profit is socially beneficial, that those who
are best able to make money should be the ones who
decide what technology is used and what is produced
and that the individual's efforts to satisfy their
self-interest in the market place should be
utilised to protect the environment.
A future society would rest on different values,
goals and principles. One possibility is a
knowledge based society in which a person's status
rests on their knowledge rather than their income,
where decisions are made by those who are wisest
rather than those who control capital. However,
whilst people continue to believe in sustainable
development and the incremental change approach,
then such radically different visions will continue
to be dismissed as unrealistic.
Source: Sharon Beder, 'The Hidden Messages Within
Sustainable Development', Social
Alternatives 13(2), July 1994, pp.
8-12.
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