Comments on: Global boosters/2011/01/28/global-boosters/Andrew Curry's blog on futures, trends, emerging issues and scenariosMon, 31 Jan 2011 08:19:35 +0000hourly1http://wordpress.com/By: thenextwavefutures/2011/01/28/global-boosters/#comment-2852Mon, 31 Jan 2011 08:09:48 +0000/?p=2030#comment-2852Reading William Greider’s (1997) book, One World, Ready Or Not, I found a quotation from Herman Daly which sums up the issue in the post:

“My scheme is to see the economy as a subsystem of the larger ecosystem and ask: How does the economy depend on the larger system? It depends on it as a source of raw materials and as a sink for wastes. So that obviously means that there’s a scale limit on the economy since we can’t over-burden the ecosystem. There’s a physical limit that economics doesn’t understand. The idea that you can draw on it endlessly is simply wrong.”

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By: Tweets that mention Global boosters « thenextwave -- Topsy.com/2011/01/28/global-boosters/#comment-2850Fri, 28 Jan 2011 10:33:33 +0000/?p=2030#comment-2850[…] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Phil Randal, jon turney and Ian Leaver, Andrew Curry. Andrew Curry said: http://bit.ly/g18jQq Recent #economic models of the world in 2050 projecti the past, not the future. New blog post on why. Link mended. […]

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By: Global boosters (via thenextwave) « Network Dispatches/2011/01/28/global-boosters/#comment-2848Fri, 28 Jan 2011 10:25:39 +0000/?p=2030#comment-2848[…] Global boosters (via thenextwave)Recent economics models of the world in 2050 are projections of the past, not the future. They are not designed to deal with constraints. Suddenly, with the turn of the decade and the latest World Economic Forum opening, we're awash with projections of how the world economy might look in 2050, produced by economists, and each as implausible as the other. Two, from HSBC and PwC (both open in PDF) offer similar (and improbable) views of a hugely ex … Read More […]

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By: Global boosters (via thenextwave) « Network Dispatches/2011/01/28/global-boosters/#comment-2849Fri, 28 Jan 2011 10:25:39 +0000/?p=2030#comment-2849[…] Global boosters (via thenextwave)Recent economics models of the world in 2050 are projections of the past, not the future. They are not designed to deal with constraints. Suddenly, with the turn of the decade and the latest World Economic Forum opening, we're awash with projections of how the world economy might look in 2050, produced by economists, and each as implausible as the other. Two, from HSBC and PwC (both open in PDF) offer similar (and improbable) views of a hugely ex … Read More […]

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