The Frugal Economy (eBook)
334 Seiten
Wiley (Verlag)
978-1-394-27306-5 (ISBN)
Humanity's pursuit of greatness meets the reality of finite resources
In The Frugal Economy: A Guide to Building a Better World With Less, award-winning author Navi Radjou delivers an incisive and engrossing treatment of how human beings facing climate change can reconcile our built-in drive to 'do more' and 'be better' with our planet's finite resources. You'll discover how we can thrive within planetary boundaries while achieving sustainable growth for generations to come.
In this groundbreaking book, enriched with over 100 inspiring examples, you'll learn how to create greater value with less and find:
- Practical strategies for doing more with less, benefiting both people and the planet
- Success stories of businesses fueling transformative megatrends like B2B sharing, distributed manufacturing, and triple regeneration
- Insights into reshaping economic systems to promote social and ecological harmony
Whether you're a businessperson, professional, student, academic, policymaker, regulator, or entrepreneur, you can join the movement towards a sustainable future. Get your copy of The Frugal Economy today and become a catalyst for positive change!
NAVI RADJOU is a French-American scholar, an innovation and leadership advisor, and a bestselling author. Since 2021, Navi has been ranked by Thinkers50 as one of the 50 most influential management thinkers in the world. In 2013, Navi won the prestigious Thinkers50 Innovation Award, given to a management thinker reshaping how we think about and practice innovation. He is co-author of Frugal Innovation, published by The Economist, as well as the global bestseller Jugaad Innovation (over 200,000 copies sold worldwide) and From Smart To Wise, both published by Wiley. His TED Talk on frugal innovation has garnered over 2 million video views.
CHAPTER 1
Doing Better with Less
In its March 2023 report, the World Bank warned that the economic forces that powered progress and prosperity over the last three decades are vanishing: “Between 2022 and 2030 average global potential GDP growth is expected to decline by roughly a third from the rate that prevailed in the first decade of this century – to 2.2% a year. For developing economies, the decline will be equally steep: from 6% a year between 2000 and 2010 to 4% a year over the remainder of this decade. These declines would be much steeper in the event of a global financial crisis or a recession.”1
“A lost decade could be in the making for the global economy,” presages Indermit Gill, chief economist of the World Bank.
The bank also offers suggestions for reversing this decline. “The global economy’s speed limit can be raised – through policies that incentivize work, increase productivity, and accelerate investment.”2
Unfortunately, these suggestions focus on increasing quantitively the economic growth of nations – as measured by GDP – without improving the quality of growth.
Today, we are all aware that the current growth model is not effective because it overexploits and depletes natural resources – aggravating climate change – and excludes people – worsening social inequalities. See Figure 1.1.
Figure 1.1 Today’s growth model is not working because it excludes people and depletes resources.
Here is some shocking evidence to the fact that today’s growth model is not working:
- In 2023, Earth Overshoot Day (EOD) – the date when humanity’s demand for ecological resources and services in a given year exceeds what Earth can regenerate in that year – was on August 2.3 In 2003, the EOD was September 12. We are borrowing (stealing, actually) more and more from our (ecological) future to fuel our economic growth, which is not sustainable.
- In the US, the richest economy in the world, 56% of adults are unable to cover a $1,000 emergency expense, according to Bankrate’s 2024 annual emergency savings report.4 In Europe, nearly 100 million citizens are at risk of poverty and social exclusion, which is about 22% of the total population.5
- In France, a disabled person today is three times less likely than others to find a job. Female entrepreneurs are 63% less likely than men to obtain venture capital (VC) financing.6 In the US, black women receive less than 0.35% of all VC funding.7
Given this bleak scenario, experts are coming up with alternative growth models that claim to be more virtuous. A popular alternative much touted today is decoupling, whereby “continued growth in the economy is accompanied by a further contraction in CO2 emissions.”8
This so-called green growth model based on decoupling calls for companies to “do more with less,” that is, keep producing more goods and services while “decarbonizing” their supply chains (see Figure 1.2).
In his book aptly titled More from Less, Andrew McAfee, a research scientist at MIT Sloan School of Management, argues that this decoupling has already occurred in the US. McAfee’s book shows how the US has been able to increase productivity and drive more economic growth using fewer physical inputs since the first Earth Day in 1970. According to McAfee, “evidence from America shows that even though population and prosperity continued to increase steadily in the years after Earth Day (1970), resource consumption did not. Instead, it started to decline. The country now generally uses less metal, fertilizer, water, paper and timber, and energy year after year,” even as output increases.9 McAfee points to America’s decoupling, that is the country’s capacity to do “more from less,” as evidence of the dematerialization of the US economy. In the same vein, proponents of the so-called circular economy today argue that we can do “more from less” by efficiently reusing and recycling existing resources and materials, instead of extracting more virgin materials from our depleted Earth.
Although decoupling could reduce the negative ecological impact of businesses, by curbing their emissions and resource consumption, it doesn’t incentivize companies to radically change their existing business models or positively contribute to society.
Figure 1.2 Decoupling aims to generate more economic growth while limiting and even reducing negative environmental impact like emissions.
I argue that what the world needs today is not decoupling but recoupling. It’s time to “recouple” (reintegrate) economic activities with people, communities, and the planet. Rather than mindlessly dematerialize our economy using technology, we must intentionally rematerialize our economy, making its gains feel real for everyday citizens. Instead of decoupling to boost our productivity, we must do recoupling to boost our humanity.
Such tight recoupling will enable a regenerative development model that will boost human development and increase social and ecological harmony and will lead us toward a conscious society (see Figure 1.3).10
By engaging in – and actively shaping – this virtuous growth cycle, businesses could serve a noble purpose that is larger than just profit-making.
Here is the hiccup: our existing economic system, which is built on capitalism, lacks the right values and mechanisms to enable the recoupling of business and society/planet.
Figure 1.3 Rather than mindlessly pursue unbridled economic growth, regenerative development balances economic activities with human development and social and ecological harmony, hence leading us to a conscious society.
Here are four reasons why capitalism – the operating system that runs our modern societies – is unfit to drive the kind of inclusive and sustainable growth I just described:11
- First, capitalism exalts the virtues of private ownership, individualism, and competition, which motivate businesses to amass and hoard assets and compete ferociously with one another in a zero-sum game.
- Second, it pursues relentlessly economies of scale (efficiencies) through mass production and global supply chains, which are gravely polluting and resource-hungry, and lack the flexibility and resilience to cope with catastrophic disruptions like COVID-19 or water scarcity.12
- Third, it incentivizes businesses to maximize short-term profits exclusively for shareholders instead of creating long-term value for all stakeholders, including local communities.13
- Fourth, capitalism fails to hold businesses accountable for the harmful consequences of their operations – known as negative externalities – such as social inequality and ecological degradation.14
Given its fundamental and systemic flaws, we can’t rely on a dysfunctional capitalist economy to power inclusive and sustainable growth. We need to totally upgrade and reinvent the economic system that undergirds our societies to make it more efficient and agile, socially inclusive, and ecologically beneficial.
To build and sustain radically new business models and industry value chains that are truly beneficial to people, society, and the planet, we need a new operating system that I call a frugal economy.
A frugal economy strives to expand human awareness and create greater economic, social, and ecological value simultaneously while wisely optimizing the use of all available resources.
In contrast with the “do more with more” capitalistic system, which gobbles up ever more resources to pump out ever more useless products, the frugal economy strives to do better with less by making the most of all existing resources to maximize the value for all stakeholders.
A frugal economy responds to the needs of thrifty and socially conscious consumers who seek a simpler, healthier, and more eco-friendly lifestyle and want to deepen their community ties through active local engagement.
This frugal economy is not a utopian vision.
Using more than 100 inspiring real-life examples from all over the world, this book vividly shows how this multitrillion-dollar frugal economy is already emerging, fueled by three megatrends that will fundamentally reshape our societies in coming decades: business-to-business (B2B) sharing, distributed (decentralized) manufacturing and hyper-local value networks, and triple regeneration. See Figure 1.4. I will unpack these disruptive megatrends one by one in the first three parts of the book. In the fourth part, I will describe how these three megatrends are deeply reinventing the largest economy in the world: America.
In Part I, I will show how competing companies can learn to cooperate and share their physical and intangible resources to collectively maximize their value and have a positive impact on society and the planet.
Figure 1.4 Conscious customers and innovators fuel the rise of a frugal economy that enables the sharing of resources, localizes...
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 1.10.2024 |
---|---|
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management |
Schlagworte | b2b sharing • Distributed Manufacturing • ESG • esg book • esg business • esg business strategies • local value networks • sustainable business • Sustainable Business Strategies • sustainable economy • Sustainable Markets • tripe regeneration |
ISBN-10 | 1-394-27306-1 / 1394273061 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-394-27306-5 / 9781394273065 |
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