We live in an energy and materials economy, not a monetary economy. The damages to nature are not included in the prices of things we pay for. That is called an externality. And that's where these externalities come from. They used to be maybe negligible,. but now they occupy center stage and aand have to betake into account.
On this episode, we meet with ecological economist and professor emeritus at the University of Maryland, Herman Daly.
Daly discusses the biophysical underpinnings of human economies, and how a social system that is more tethered to our ecological reality might come into being.
Daly explains how the transformation from classical economics to neoclassical economics created an understanding of the world that prioritized utility and money above all else. How did neoclassical economics contribute to our current predicament?
Further, Daly explores what he believes to be the best-case scenario humans face in the next decade.
About Herman Daly
Herman Daly is Professor Emeritus of economics at the University of Maryland School of Public Policy, former senior economist at the World Bank, and a founder of the field of ecological economics. He is the author of For The Common Good, Valuing the Earth, the textbook Ecological Economics, and many other books, essays, and academic papers
For Show Notes and Transcript visit: https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/episode/06-herman-daly