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samenvatting sustainable development handelswetenschappen

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Zelfgemaakte samenvatting sustainable development handelswetenschappen, geslaagd door het leren van deze samenvatting.

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  • 30 september 2023
  • 98
  • 2022/2023
  • Samenvatting

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Sustainable development
Lecture 1
Poverty
Absolute poverty: income is not enough to fill the list of basic needs
Relative poverty: compared to medium income
Extreme poverty: 8.44% in 2019 (the highest in sub Saharan Africa)

Widening gap between rich and poor

Improved sanitation: (one that separates human excreta from human contact) that is not shared with
other households

Brazil: high income inequality (higher stan the US and China

 Declining Gini coefficient

The 8 richest people own as much wealth as the poorer half of the world’s population

Current global population: 8.02 billion

 1800: 1 billion
 1970: 4 billion

BAU= business as usual

Kyoto protocol: reduce carbon emissions

The 1% richest peoples is responsible for 15% of the worlds carbon emissions

0-4% of all land mammals are wild animals

Brundtland: defines sustainable development as development that needs the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

 UN commission
 Not a clear definition, more like a mission statement

Three economic ideas
Preferences, constraints and choice

Idea 1: markets need price correction, behaviour depends on prices

If all the prices are solved, people will be rational, no externalities,…

Allocation:

Markets function well if there is no market failure (inefficiency):
• Market power
• Externalities
• Public Goods
• Asymmetric information
• Internalities
𝑫𝑾𝑳: death weight loss


1

,Externalities:

=Effects of one economic agent’s behaviour (individual, household, firm,...) on another agent’s
welfare without compensation
 Can be positive or negative
 A negative externality creates ‘Marginal External Costs’ (MEC) on top of the Marginal Cost (MC) of
the activity
 Lead to inefficiency (‘Dead Weight Loss’ - DWL)
Policy?

Negative externality:

• Qprivate Pprivate
• DWL = B
• ‘prices are wrong’
• Policy: Pigovian Taxation (solution)
 Black line
• Correct prices
• P* Q*
• Issues?
• Externality to whom?
• For CO2 emissions: what is
‘the right price’? guarantee to avoid
climate change?

Idea 2:

Macroeconomic model contains (man-made/owned) physical (and sometimes human) capital to
produce final goods or services that can be consumed (C and G).
Production leads to income which can be spent on C and G
Issues?
• Other types of capital? (capital with no owner)
• Welfare/well-being depends on other types of goods and services as well?
C+HC => G+S => Y (capital + human capital => goods + services => income)
 Leisure (vrije tijdsbestedingen), ecosystem services,… are not a part of the model (they are
not produced by the market but we enjoy them)
 We only look at privately owned capital
NC= natural capital

Idea 3:

There is one market equilibrium: X (never 2 or more)
 where demand and supply cross
 Tendency towards the market equilibrium
But suppose reality looks like this: ‘coordination game’
 Investments lead to capital
 Capital leads to production (economic activity)
 Investment decisions in year t+1 depend on economic activity in year t.
 e.g. a firm decides on I based on average I (investment)
 Other examples? Prices in the houses market: the prices of today depends on the prices of
yesterday


2

,Lecture 2
Introduction: collapse
Polynesians arrived:
Tropical forest (16m trees), birds,...
Agriculture: yams, sweet potatoes, taro
Signs of intensification
Religion, government
Europeans arrived:
They found a collapsed society: no trees, lack of organised society...


3

, Symbol of a people travelling for starting a new society
Exploiting resources past the sustainable level... collapse
People make to much use of their resources and it begins to collapse

Rapa nui
 collapsed society
 Signs of a powerful past
 “Petri dish”
 Unsustainable behaviour?
o Overhunting
o Deforestation
 Other factors?
o Rats eating the seeds/roots of the trees?
o Climate change? Sand storms
 Diet: fruit, fish, crops
 Trees supply: fruit, harpoons, canoes, move around the statues
 Need for trees outpaced forest’s ability to regenerate
 ‘Slash and burn’ agriculture
 Without trees: no canoes, no fishing, erosion of top soil...
 Civil war, unrest..
 Europeans arrived (slave trade, diseases)
 people overuse the resources they have

capital: available service that people can use, it is used in a to extensive way



 Trees: the most valuable asset
o Trees provide fruit, harpoons, roofing, canoes for fishing ...
o Move around the statues
 Agriculture: Slash and burn => Deforestation
o Jared Diamond: ‘Easter Island is the most extreme example of deforestation in the
pacific’
o No canoes, no fishing, change of diet towards more crops, more deforestation
 Even after signs of problems
o Hunting and deforestation continued
o Construction of new Moai statues

Collapse
 Research:
o comparative method
o input and output variables
o regression model
 Diamond looks into a number of past and present societies to come up with a theory about
why societies fail or succeed
 5 factors
o “If anyone tells you there is only one factor, you know immediately this person is an
idiot”
o Five factors that contribute to collapse:
1. environmental problems, human impacts
2. climate change
3. hostile neighbours

4

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