Learn Before
  • Unsustainability of Reversing Environmental Damage via Affluence-Creating Mechanisms

The economic activities and technological innovations that have historically driven significant increases in national wealth are inherently well-suited to also solve large-scale environmental problems, because a wealthier society can afford to invest more in remediation and conservation.

0

1

a month ago

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

Social Science

Empirical Science

Science

Economy

CORE Econ

The Economy 1.0 @ CORE Econ

Ch.1 The Capitalist Revolution - The Economy 1.0 @ CORE Econ

Economics

Ch.2 Technology and incentives - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ

Introduction to Microeconomics Course

Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy

The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ

Cognitive Psychology

Psychology

Related
  • Comparison of Incentives for Labor-Saving vs. Nature-Saving Technology

  • A developing nation's government proposes a plan to address widespread deforestation caused by its rapidly growing logging industry. The core of the plan is to provide subsidies to expand logging operations, with the stated goal of using the increased tax revenue to fund future reforestation and conservation projects. Which of the following statements provides the most robust critique of this plan's fundamental logic?

  • Critique of the 'Prosperity as a Cure' Argument

  • The 'Growth as a Solution' Paradox

  • The economic activities and technological innovations that have historically driven significant increases in national wealth are inherently well-suited to also solve large-scale environmental problems, because a wealthier society can afford to invest more in remediation and conservation.

  • The Paradox of Economic Growth and Environmental Repair

  • Match each proposed environmental strategy with the economic critique that best describes its underlying logic, considering that historical wealth generation has often been linked to environmental harm.

  • An economic advisor proposes that the most effective strategy for achieving long-term environmental health is to first prioritize rapid economic growth by intensifying the use of existing, high-yield industrial technologies. The advisor's rationale is that the wealth generated will eventually fund the development and implementation of environmental cleanup solutions. What is the most significant logical flaw in this "grow first, clean up later" argument?

  • Evaluating the 'Prosperity and Purity Plan'

  • Evaluating the 'More Production for Purer Air' Plan

  • A city's economic prosperity is heavily dependent on a large industrial sector that, while providing jobs and tax revenue, is also the primary cause of severe local air pollution. Four policy advisors present different long-term strategies to address the pollution. Based on the principle that the mechanisms causing a problem may be unsuited to solving it, which proposal's logic is most fundamentally flawed?