|
|||||
Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
LESSON
32
John
Rawls, on the other hand,
argues that though it is
unjust to impose heavy burdens
on
present
generations for the sake of
the future, it is also unjust
for present generations to leave
nothing
for the future. We should
ask ourselves what we can
reasonably expect they
might
want
and, putting ourselves in
their place, leave what we
would like them to have
left for us.
Justice,
in short, requires that we
hand over to our children a
world in no worse condition
than
the
one we received ourselves.
The
ethics of care support
conservation policies similar to
the ones Rawls advocates.
Utilitarian
reasoning,
too, supports Rawls'
conclusions. Some utilitarians
posit that the ethical
thing to do
is
to discount future consequences
based on their uncertainty and distance
from the future. We
are
therefore clearly obligated
not to take actions that will
almost certainly harm
tomorrow's
generations.
However, since we can be less certain
what the effects of our
actions will be on far
distant
generations, our responsibility
towards them is somewhat
diminished.
We
cannot rely on market mechanisms to
ensure adequate conservation for
future generations,
however.
The needs of future
generations are so heavily
discounted by markets that
they hardly
affect
prices at all.
Six
reasons conspire to bring
this about:
1.
Multiple access - If several
separate extractors can use a resource,
then the shared
access
will
invariably lead the resource to be depleted
too fast. As with several
people with straws
in
one milkshake, each owner's
private interest is in taking it
out as fast as possible.
2.
Time preferences and myopia - Firms
often have short time
horizons under the stress
of
commercial
competition. This may
under-represent the legitimate
interests of future
generations.
3.
Inadequate forecasting - Present
users may simply fail to
foresee future developments.
This
may
reflect a lack of sufficient
research interest and ability to
discern future changes.
4.
Special influences - Specific taxes and
other incentive devices may encourage
overly rapid
use
of resources.
5.
External effects - There are
important externalities in the
uses of many resources, so
that
private
users ignore major degrees
of pollution and other external
costs.
6.
Distribution - Finally, private
market decisions are based on
the existing pattern
of
distribution
of wealth and income. As resource users
vote with their dollars,
market demand
will
more strongly reflect the
interests and preferences of the
wealthy.
Many
observers believe that conservation
measures are falling short
of what is needed.
Some
even
maintain that future generations will
have a quality of life much
lower than our
own.
Industrialized
nations will need to convert
from growth-oriented technologies to
more labor-
intensive
ones. In fact, our entire
economic system may have to
abandon the goal of
steadily
increasing
production: continual economic
growth promises to degrade the
quality of life for
future
generations. This is because demand
for depletable resources will
continue to rise until
the
resources simply run out.
Then, living standards will
decline sharply.
One
group, the Club of Rome,
predicted that a catastrophic
collapse of goods and services
will
result
at some point in the middle
of this century; by 2100 the
world's population may
even
drop
below 1900 levels. More
recently, the World watch
Institute has concluded that
even if the
Club
of Rome's timetables were off,
their conclusions were
substantially correct.
73
Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
As
our supplies of energy
diminish, other moral
concerns are raised. Though
the U.S. has
only
6%
of the world's population, we
consume 25% of its energy;
50% of the people of the
world
get
along with only 8%.
Some seriously question
whether high-consuming nations
like ours can
be
justified in using for its
own sake the nonrenewable
resources of the world that
others are
too
weak or frugal to use
themselves.
In
1999, the price of petrol is
the lowest it has been
for over two decades,
with large reserves
of
oil
stored by governments and corporations.
Many other commodity prices
are also at very low
levels.
These present-day facts are
all very different from
the warnings issued in the
early
1970s
about a world-wide environment
crisis and shortages of resources.
One
of the best known warning
voices was contained in the
book "Limits to
Growth",
published
in 1972. It sold twelve
million copies in 37 languages. Whilst
the book did
not
predict
what precisely would happen, it
stated that if the world's
consumption patterns and
population
growth continued at the same
high rates of the time,
the earth would strike
its limits
within
a century. The message was
that this outcome was not
inevitable. People could
change
their
policies - and the sooner the
better.
The
book was very controversial.
Its note of warning jarred
with the sense of optimism
that
existed
at that time. The 1950s and
1960s had been a period of
immense economic growth
in
both
the Western and Communist
worlds, both of which had a
very low rate of
unemployment.
There
was a general belief in the
Western world that another
1930s-type Depression could be
avoided
as a result of government intervention in
the economy. Additionally, it was
assumed
that
there was a standard (Western) formula
for economic growth that
could apply
throughout
the
Third World. All the West
had to do was to win the Cold
War and the future for
the entire
world
was assured.
Very
little attention had been paid to
the environmental consequences of
economic growth.
Indeed,
both capitalists and communists
were convinced that there
could not be much of
an
environmental
crisis. For capitalists, the
market would solve any
environmental problem
(for
example,
if resources were used too
rapidly, then prices would go up and so
usage would be
forced
down), and Marxist dogma assured
Communists that technology
could solve all
problems.
Both
political systems regarded criticism of
their respective systems on environmental
grounds
as
nonsense. Each said that "Limits to
Growth" was alarmist and the
book was branded as
pessimistic
and a threat to stable government.
Although "Limits to Growth"
sold well around
the
world, government policy-makers
ignored much of the essence
of the warning. It is true
that
the
first ministries of the
environment were established at this
time and there were
tougher
environmental
laws introduced. But both
political systems remained committed to
the overall
idea
that growth was good and that
the environmental consequences
could be solved by
administrative,
legal and technological
measures.
The
Club of Rome
"Limits
to Growth" was commissioned by The
Club of Rome, a think-tank of
scientists,
economists,
businesspeople, international civil
servants, and politicians from
the five
continents.
The Club began in an
informal way at the behest
of Aurelio Peccei, an
Italian
businessperson
based in Rome. In 1965,
Peccei gave a speech on the
dramatic changes
taking
74
Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
place
in the world, especially
relating to science and technology.
The speech attracted
considerable
attention.
Alexander
King, who had not previously
known Peccei, received a
copy of the speech.
King
was
a British scientist, who had
been a scientific adviser to
the British Government, and
who
was
then at the Paris-based
Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development
(OECD),
the organization of rich
Western countries. King had
similar concerns to Peccei
about
the
commonly-held veneration for
growth that allowed little
thought for any
long-term
consequences,
and decided to meet Peccei to see
how these ideas could be
followed up.
Peccei
and King were not confident
that either the market or
technology could function as
a
way
of solving environmental problems.
After calling together
groups of economists and
scientists
to discuss problems facing
the world, they asked a
group of computer experts at
MIT
in
the US to examine what would
happen if people continued to consume
such a high amount
of
resources. This study became
the basis of the "Limits to
Growth" book.
The
study had some obvious
limitations, most of which stemmed
from the use of
computer
modeling.
This was the first time
that computer modeling had
been used for such an
ambitious
exercise.
The success of such modeling
depends on both the quality
of data and the
capabilities
of
the computer. In 1970,
methods of data collection
were still rudimentary. Many
countries,
for
example, did not know
the true size of their
populations. There have been
many
improvements
in national data collection
but, even today, we are
still far from getting
all the
data
we need to produce accurate models.
For example, there is debate
in many countries on
how
to work out the exact
numbers of unemployed people, with
official statistics usually
being
lower
than those of non-governmental
organizations that work with
unemployed people.
In
addition, the quality of the
model used was limited by
the available computer
technology and
could
only use a low number of
equations in its construction.
Computer modeling has
now
become
more sophisticated with the
far greater computer power
that is available meaning
that
models
have become more complex.
However, computer modeling
still leaves a great deal to
be
desired, as is evident with the
failure of government finance departments
to predict the size
of
economic growth in the
coming years.
Leaving
aside the details of the
projections, there is the
question of the essence of
the warning:
is
the earth approaching its
"Limits to Growth"?
75
Table of Contents:
|
|||||