ABSTRACT

Professor Bob Williams examines the essential elements that give ecosystems their durability. These key characteristics are: self-regulating cycles of key materials, a plentiful and durable energy source, an ability to adjust to changing circumstances, and the capacity for resiliency in the face of unpredictable disruptions. In separate chapters, each of these natural attributes are applied to our economy and 20 polices are recommended to shift our economy toward each of these objectives. The policies include marketable waste emission permits, a "carbon" tax, split-rate property taxation, environmental assurance bonds, a revamped home mortgage deduction, and an inheritance tax. These policies function to implement the principle of full-cost pricing in order to ensure market incentives that encourage environmentally temperate behaviour and decisions.

This book will be of interest to students of Ecology and Economics, at undergraduate and postgraduate level alike, as well as anyone seeking an understanding of key ecological concepts that are critical to fully appreciating the role of natural capital in our economic affairs

chapter 1|15 pages

Dueling paradigms

chapter 2|25 pages

Our precious endowment

chapter 3|17 pages

Understanding our natural endowment

chapter 4|15 pages

A tale of two energy crises

chapter 5|14 pages

Dysfunctional markets

chapter 6|16 pages

Nature as guide

chapter 7|17 pages

Closing the materials loop

chapter 8|13 pages

Shifting back to renewable energy sources

chapter 9|15 pages

Economic succession

chapter 10|21 pages

Economic resiliency

chapter 11|13 pages

Conclusion