Better Policies for Better Lives: Policy for Well -being...
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BetterPoliciesforBetterLives:PolicyforWell-beingandSocialProgress
Lesson5.SocialWelfareoverTime:SustainabilityMarcoMirad’Ercole([email protected])OECDStatisticsDirectorate

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SustainabilityintheOECDwell-beingframework
“Sustainabledevelopmentisdevelopmentthatmeetstheneedsofthepresentwithoutcompromisingtheabilityoffuturegenerationstomeettheirownneeds”.Twokeyconcepts:i)theconceptof needs,inparticulartheessentialneedsoftheworld'spoor,towhichoverridingpriorityshouldbegiven;ii)theideaof limitations imposedbythestateoftechnologyandsocialorganizationontheenvironment'sabilitytomeetpresentandfutureneeds”
WorldCommissiononDevelopmentandtheEnvironment(Brundtland,1987)

A. The‘capitalstock’approachtosustainabilityB. Differenttypesofcapital
– Economiccapital– Humancapital– Socialcapital– Naturalcapital
C. WeakandstrongsustainabilityD. Sustainabilityandpolicymaking
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Structureofthislesson

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A.Capitalapproach(1)Keyideas• Communitiesandpolicy-makersdonotcareonlyaboutcurrentwell-being,butwantwell-beingthatlastsovertime(sustainability)
• Forthistohappen,youneedtofocuson‘drivers’supportingvariouswell-beingoutcomes(i.e.instrumentallyimportant)
• Someofthesedrivershavefeaturesofpersistence:theylastovertimebutshapedbytoday’sactionsandbehaviours,i.e.capitalstocks
• Whileresourcesdifferdependingonthewell-beingoutcomeconsidered,someareimportantformanyoutcomesatthesametime
• Theseresourcesareembeddedin‘systems’shapingpeople’slife(e.g.naturalsystem,economicsystem,socialsystem)

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A.Capitalapproach(2)Sustainableincome. RootsinFisher’s(utility-based)income:“flowofconsumptionthatcouldbeharvestedfromanation’scapitalstock”
• Conventional(Hicksian)incomewouldrankaneconomywithGDPpcof20KUSD,butwherepeopleliveshortlives,asequivalenttoaneconomywiththesameGDPpcwherepeoplelivemuchlongerlives
Whataretherelevant‘capitalstocks’?Well-beyondeconomiccapital
• Resourcesforfuturewell-beingare‘capitals’thatlastovertime,dissipatequicklyifnotattendedto,shapedbyinvestmentanddepreciationoccurringnow
Kt =Kt-1 +It – Dt
• Severaltypesofcapital(economic,natural,humanandsocialcapital)areimportantforfuturewell-beingofindividualsandsocieties
SWt+n =F(Ket,Kht,Kst,Knt,…)

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A.Capitalapproach(3)Whataretherelevant‘prices’foralltheseresources?• Notpricesobservedonthemarket,but“shadowprices”thatreflectthe
contributionofvariouscapitalstohumanwell-beingtodayandinthefuture• Thesepricesreflectallthenegativeexternalitiesassociatedtoeconomicactivities,
missingmarkets,andincreasewhenstocksofcapitalapproach“tippingpoints”
Whatisthenecessaryconditionfor‘sustainability’?• Stockoftotalcapitalpercapitathatisnon-declining
0≤(Σi )Ki *PsiWhatdoesitrequire?• ThemaximumrateofCt consistentwithmaintainingCt+n isNetNationalProduct,
i.e.yieldgeneratedbysocietystockofcapital• “Output-sustainabilitycorrespondenceprinciple”,i.e.in“idealisedconditions”(i.e.
marketscapturefullsocialvalueofallinputs,andaccountsincludeallstocksofcapital)NNPandsustainableincomeareidentical.Corollary:Ø TotheextentthatSNAomitimportantcomponentsofconsumptionandofnet
capitalaccumulation,theyprovidemisleadingmeasureofsustainableincome

Inthinkingaboutcapital,weareinterestedin
• Stocks,i.e.theamountofcapitalavailableatapointintime,generallyexpressedonapercapitabasis
• ‘Net’stocks,i.e.thedifferencebetweenassetsandliabilitiesofacountry/community,basedoncomprehensivebalancesheet
• Flows,i.e.investments,depreciationanddepletionthatleadtochangesinthestockavailableatagivenpointintime
• Risks,i.e.likelihoodthatachangeinagivenstockofresourceswilltranslateintochangesinwell-beingoutcomesforpeople
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A.Capitalapproach(4)

Example:climatesystem
• ClimatechangeisduetoaccumulationinatmosphereofdifferenttypesofGHGgases,eachwithitswarmingpotential(carbon-equivalent),andimpactsonfuturewelfare
• ConcentrationofGHGsisthemaindriverofclimatechangeanditsimpactsonpeople’swell-being:concentrationsas‘hiddendebttonature’→Stock
• Concentrationsaredrivenbyflowsofman-madeemissions(negativeinvestment)andnaturaldecayofwarmingpotential(depreciation)→Flows
• GHGconcentrationstranslateintohighertemperatureswithdifferentprobabilities→Risk
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A.Capitalapproach(5)
Stabilisation level 2 C 3 C 4 C 5 C 6 C 7 C
450 ppm 78% 18% 3% 1% 0% 0%550 ppm 99% 69% 24% 7% 2% 1%650 ppm 100% 94% 58% 24% 9% 4%750 ppm 100% 99% 82% 47% 22% 9%
Source: Stern Review
Temperature increaseGHG concentration levels and temperature increase

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B.Differenttypesofcapital
B1.Economiccapital
B2.Humancapital
B3.SocialCapital
B2.Naturalcapital

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Dualnatureofeconomiccapital• “storesofvalueoverwhichownershiprightsare
enforcedbyinstitutionalunits..fromwhicheconomicbenefitsmaybederived bytheirownersbyholding..orusingthem,overaperiodoftime”(SNA2008)
B1.Economiccapital(1)
The‘wealth’and‘capital’perspective• Relatedconcepts(valueofaneconomicassetshouldreflectis
itscurrentandfutureproductivecapacity)butnotidentical• Marketpricesforwealthmayreflect‘bubbles’or‘rent
extraction’unrelatedtoproductiveuse

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ScopeofeconomiccapitalinSNA• Machines,buildings,infrastructure(fixed,produced,material)• Inventories(not-fixed,produced,material)• Landandnaturalresources(fixed,non-produced,material;partof
‘economiccapital’whendeliveringeconomicbenefits)• R&D,intellectualproperty/knowledgecapital(produced,immaterial)• Netforeignassetpositionofacountry(financialcapital)Measuredthrough• Balancesheets(openingandclosingstocks;assets/liabilities/net
worth),forthetotaleconomyandvariousinstitutionalsectors• Accumulationaccounts,i.e.changesinthestockof
assets/liabilities/networthbetweentwodates(flows)• Capitalaccounts(transactionsinnon-financialassets,savings,capitaltransfers)• Revaluationaccounts(nominalholdinggains/losses,splitintorealandneutral)• Otherchangesinvolumesaccounts(effectsofexceptionaleventscausing
changesinvolumesofassets/liabilities,e.g.earthquakes)
B1.Economiccapital(2)

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B1.Economiccapital(3)MainpurposesformeasuringeconomiccapitalinSNA
• Computingconsumptionoffixedcapital(GDP/NDP)• Measuringcapitalservices(productivityanalysis,TFP)• Establishingbalancesheetsforeconomyandinstitutionalsectors
Measures• Investment,depreciation,andstocksofeconomiccapital• MethodologicalguidanceOECD(2009),MeasuringCapital
Limits• OECDcountriesdifferinthefrequencyandcomprehensivenessof
theirflow-of-fundsandbalancesheetdata• Limitedinformationonnon-financialassetsbysectors(e.g.land,
structures)

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EconomiccapitalandGDPgrowth
• Classicaleconomists:capitalaccumulationasmaindriver̶ Accumulationdrivenby‘normal’rateofprofit(higherwageratelowers
normalprofitabilityofinvestment)̶ But‘incentivetoinvest’alsodependsonutilisationofproductivecapacity,
whichinfluencesthe‘actual’rateorprofit
• Neo-classicaleconomists:technicalprogressasdriver• Growthaccounting
─ Solow-model:(exogenous)technicalprogress─ Endogenousgrowthmodels:technologicalprogressembodiedinnew
machinesandhumancapital• Investment(ineconomiccapital)determinedby(full-
employment)savings,interestratesasequilibratingmechanism
B1.Economiccapital(4)

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Concernsonsustainabilityarepartlylinkedtoweakaccumulationofeconomiccapitalinaftermathofcrisis
B1.Economiccapital(5)

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B1.Economiccapital(6)Ø Investmentandaccumulationofeconomiccapitaldependonunusedcapacity:recessions
impactonboth‘actual’and‘potential’output,i.e.effectsofcrisisbecomepermanent
GrowthinpotentialGDPindifferentOECDprojections,2007=100
Source: OECD Economic Outlook June versions from 2007 to 2016
Euro area 13United States
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100
105
110
115
120
EO81(2007)
EO99(2016)
95
100
105
110
EO81(2007)
EO99(2016)

Distributionofeconomiccapitalmattersforsustainability• Concentrationofrisksinoneinstitutionalsectormaythreatenwholesystem– Grossdebtandfinancialnetworthofgovernment– Householddebt– Leverageofthebankingsector
• Distributionalsoimportantwithineachsector– Over-indebtedhouseholds– Over-exposedfinancialinstitutions(‘stresstests’)
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B1.Economiccapital(7)

B2.Humancapital(1)Definition
– “theknowledge,skills,competenciesandattributesembodiedinindividualsthatfacilitatethecreationofpersonal,socialandeconomicwell-being”(OECD,2001)
• RecognisedsinceA.Smith– Valuation: “Amaneducatedattheexpenseofmuchlabour
ortime..mustbeexpectedtoearnoverandabovetheusualwages..thewholeexpensesofhiseducation,with..ordinaryprofitsofanequallyvaluablecapital”
– Depreciation: “Amanwhosewholelifeisspentperformingafewsimpleoperations..hasnooccasiontoexerthisunderstanding..Henaturallyloses..thehabitofsuchexertionandbecomesasstupidandignorantasitispossibleforahumancreaturetobecome”
– Under-provision: “Thisisthestateintowhichthelabouringpoor,i.e.thegreatbodyofthepeople,mustnecessarilyfall,unlessgovernmenttakessomepaintopreventit”
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B2.Humancapital(2)Features
• Non-market(embodiedinindividuals)• Depleteswhennonused(contrarytoeconomiccapital)
Measurement• OutsidetheSNAassetboundary(non-material,noownershiprights,no
transferabilityacrosseconomicunits)• Measuredthroughphysicalindicatorsofitsvariouselements– Highestlevelofeducationcompleted– Meanyearsofschooling– Shareofworkforcereceivingon-the-jobtraining– Unemploymentandwithdrawalsfromlabourforce– Healthconditions
ØDistinctionbetweencurrentwell-being(i.e.skills,health)andhumancapitalbecomesblurredunlessyoutakeforward-lookingview(e.g.children)orfocusonrisks(e.g.obesity)
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B2.Humancapital(3)Anoverallmeasureofthehumancapitalstock?• Jorgenson-Fraumeni approach(monetaryvaluation)
– Discountedpresentvalueoffutureearningsthatcouldbegeneratedoverthelife-timeofpeoplecurrentlyliving
– Dependoneducation,mortality,labourmarketconditions– Recursivesystem:
• Lifetimeearningsofapersonofgiveneducationaged64(1yearbeforeretirement)equaltheirannualearningsatthatage
• Lifetimeearningsofpersonaged63isthesumoftheirannualearningsat63plusthe(discounted)earningshe/shemayexpecttoreceiveuponreaching64
• ..andsoonuntilyoureachschoolage 19

B2.Humancapital(4)Whatdothesemonetaryestimatesshow?
• Evidence: Sizeofhumancapitalinrichcountriesissignificantlyhigherthanthatofeconomiccapital
• Implication: weunderminefuturewell-beingbytreatingexpendituresineducation,training,health-careasconsumptionratherthanproductiveinvestment
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B2.Humancapital(5)Whatarethesemonetaryestimatesmissing?• Permanenteffectsofrecessionsonhumancapital
– Firmsreduceon-the-jobtraining,andlooseexperiencedworkerswhencuttingjobs:effectsnotcapturedbyJF-typemeasures
– Newgraduatesenteringlabourmarketinarecessionmayexperiencehigherunemploymentandlowerearningthatwillpermanentlyscartheirfutureprospects
• Assumptionsoffuturegrowthanddiscountrate– Earningsgrowthinrecentpastmaybepoorguidetofutureearningsgrowth(laboursharehasbeenfallingovertime)
• EffortstowardsconstructinghumancapitalsatelliteaccountsarepursuedbyNSOs/researchers
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B3.Socialcapital(1)
• “Networkstogetherwithsharednorms,valuesandunderstandingsthatfacilitatecooperation withinoramonggroups”(OECD,2001)
• Features– Non-material,non-marketasset– Valueincreaseswithuse– Relationsbetweenpeopleratherthanindividualfeature
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B3.Socialcapital(2)
Different(orthogonal?)conceptsofsocialcapital
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• PierreBourdieu:individuals’accesstonetworks,transmissionofadvantageacrossgenerations
• JamesColeman:‘varietyofentities’ shapingpeople’sbehavioursandresults(e.g.education)
• RobertPutnam:networkofsupport,civicengagementandnormsofreciprocity(horizontalandverticalrelationships),regionaldevelopmentinItaly

B3.Socialcapital(3)Elements
– Socialnetworksupport(e.g.havingsomeoneyoucancountuponincaseofneed)
– Personalrelations(frequencyanddensityofrelations,e.g.howoftendoyoumeetfamiliesandfriends?)
– Civicengagement(e.g.participatingormembershipofvariousorganisations)
– Trustandcooperativenorms(e.g.honesty,attitudestostrangers,propensitytocooperate)
..Allcanbemeasuredthroughsurveysandothermeans
Ø Nostatisticalstandards,butmethodologicalworkpursuedonsomeaspects(e.g.OECDGuidelinesonMeasuringTrust)andinsomecountries(e.g.ONSconsultationonSC)
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B3.Socialcapital(4)
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ØMuchoftheinternationalevidenceonsocialcapitalisbasedonsurvey-measuresoftrustinstrangers:whatdoesthisshows?
• Datafrom≠wavesWVS• ‘Cluster’ofhigh-trust
(Nordic)andlow-trust(SouthEurope)countries
• Divergence:NOR,NLDmovefurtherup;UK,USmovefurtherdown
Source:UKBehaviouralInsightUnit

B3.Socialcapital(5)• Governanceasatypeofsocialcapital?
– Noagreement.But,whethertheyincludedinSKornot,muchconsensusthatgovernancemattersforawiderangeofdevelopmentoutcomes
– Whatis“governance”?
• "theexerciseofpolitical,economicandadministrativeauthoritynecessarytomanageanation'saffairs”(OECD,2013)
• the"sumofthemanywaysindividualsandinstitutions,privateandpublic,managetheircommonaffairs...acontinuingprocessthroughwhichconflictinganddiverseinterestsmaybeaccommodatedandco-operativeactiontaken.Itincludesformalinstitutionsandregimesempoweredtoenforcecompliance,aswellasinformalarrangementsthatpeopleandinstitutionseitherhaveagreedtoorperceivetobeintheirinterest“(CGG,1995)
– Developmentofinstitutionsfollowsitsownlogic,separatefromeconomicandsocialdevelopment
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B3.Socialcapital(6)Conceptof‘governance’isill-defined• Focusonpublicinstitutions(i.e.judiciary,executive,legislative
branches)butotherinstitutions(e.g.media)arealsoimportant
Whatdoesgovernancedo? A.Smithon‘sovereign’sduties’• “protectingsocietyfromtheviolenceandinvasionofother
independentsocieties”• “protecting ..everymemberofthesocietyfromtheinjusticeor
oppressionofeveryothermemberofit,orthedutyofestablishinganexactadministrationofjustice”
• “erectingandmaintainingthosepublicinstitutionsandpublicworkswhich,thoughtheymaybeinthehighestdegreeadvantageoustoagreatsociety,are,however,ofsuchanaturethattheprofitcouldneverrepaytheexpensetoanyindividual..(thosethat)cannotbeexpectedthatanyindividualorsmallnumberofindividualsshoulderectormaintain”
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B3.Socialcapital(7)
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GOVERNANCE
Valuedoutcomes
• Principles:“whatisexpectedfrompublicinstitutions?”Answer:frametheiractionsundersharedvalues,e.g.safeguardingfreedom,maintainingpeace,respectingdemocraticprocess
• Processes:“howdopublicinstitutionsperformtheirrole?”Answer:dueprocess,competence,integrity,transparency(steering)
• Outcomes:”whatdotheydeliverthatimprovespeople’slife?”Answer:qualityservices,responsivenesstopeople’sneed,accessonanon-discriminatorybasis

B3.Socialcapital(7)Measurableaspectsof‘governance’
– peaceandsecurity– functioningofthejudicialsystem– people’srights– absenceof discrimination– transparencyandruleoflaw– accountabilityandlegitimacy
Statisticalinstruments– Administrativedata– Expertopinions– Householdsurveys 29

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Trust in governments, average of 28 OECD countries
Percentage of the population reporting confidence in the national government, 2006-2014
Source: Gallup World Poll, www.gallup.com/services/170945/world-poll.aspx.
Ø LowerlegitimacyofinstitutionsinaftermathofGreatrecession
B3.Socialcapital(8)

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B3.Socialcapital(9)
ØTrustininstitutions:..Largedifferencesacrosscountries
43.4%
70.5%
68.5%
74.9%
53.5%
62.6%
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%100%
National government
Health care
Education
Local police
Judicial system
Public transportation
OECD average Italy Minimum Maximum
GallupWorldPoll

B4.Naturalcapital(1)
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“Naturallyoccurringlivingandnon-livingcomponentsofEarth..thebio-physicalenvironmentthatmayprovidebenefitstohumanity”(UNSEEA,2012)
Scope• Naturalresourcesenteringin&flowingfromeconomicproduction• Ecosystemservicesprovidedtohumans
– Supportingservices(nutrientrecycling)– Provisioningservices(providingfood,geneticresources)– Regulatingservices(carbonsequestration,floodregulation)– Culturalservices(recreation,heritage,religion)
Measurement:SystemofEconomicandEnvironmentalAccounts(SEEA)― Coreaccounts(e.g.naturalresources),stat.standardsince2012― Experimentalaccounts(ecosystemservices)

B4.Naturalcapital(2)
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SEEAcoreaccounts • AppliesSNAaccountingconcepts,structuresprinciple• Startsfromeconomicperspective• Includesphysicalsupply-use-tables,functionalaccounts(e.g.environmentalprotectionexpenditure),assetaccountsfornaturalresources• Bothmonetary(basedonSNAassetboundary)andphysicalaccounts(beyond)• Assetscovered:i)mineralsandenergyres.;ii)land;iii)soilresources;iv)timberresources;v)aquaticresources;vi)otherbiologicalresources;vii)waterresources

B4.Naturalcapital(4)
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• SEEAecosystemexperimentalaccounts• AppliesSNAaccountingconcepts,structures,principles• Startsfromtheperspectiveofecosystems(“dynamiccomplexofplant,animalandmicro-organismcommunitiesandtheirlivingenvironmentinteractingasfunctionalunit”)• Eachecosystemassetrepresentdistinctspatialarea• Twotypesofflows:i)withinandbetweenecosystemassets(e.g.wetlanddependsonriver-flowsfromriver-basin);ii)flowsbetweenecosystemsandhumanactivities

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B4.Naturalcapital(5)Driversofdepletion/degradationofnaturalcapital
EnvironmentalKuznetscurve?
• Hypothesis: EnvironmentalpressuresincreaseduetohighereconomicgrowthuntilpointreachedathighlevelofGDPpc,afterwhichrelationbetweeneconomicdevelopmentandenvironmentaldegradationbecomesnegative
• Historicalevidence:mixed• PercapitaemissionsofCO2andSO2showapositivecorrelationwithGDPpc(i.e.richer
countrieshavehigher emissions),risingforCO2 (upto1970s),fallingforSO2
• Bio-diversityloss(MSA)isnegativelycorrelatedwithGDPpc(i.e.bio-diversitylossishigher inpoorer countries),weakining overtime
Pressure on natural capital
Change in population
Change in GDP pc
Income elasticity of
environmental demand
Shift from agriculture/ industry to services
Change in environmental efficiency of production
Demography Ec. Growth Preferences Ec. Structure Technology
Scale effects (+) Offsetting effects (-)

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EvidenceØClimatechange
B4.Naturalcapital(5)

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Ø Forests
B4.Naturalcapital(6)

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ØWaterabstractions
B4.Naturalcapital(7)

B4.Naturalcapital(8)Nine“criticalthresholds”ofnaturalcapital(Rockstrom etal.)
• Stratosphericozonelayerinatmosphere filtersoutultraviolet(UV)radiationfromthesun.WhenlayerdecreasesduetoCFCemissions,moreUVreachgroundlevel,causingskincancerinhumans,damagetoterrestrial/marineeco-systems
• Biodiversityloss,duetohigherdemandforfood,waterandnaturalresources,causebiodiversitylossandchangesinecosystemservices
• Chemicalpollution(toxicandsyntheticorganicpollutants,heavymetalcompounds andradioactivematerials)haveirreversibleeffectsonlivingorganismsandphysicalenvironment(affectingatmosphericprocessesandclimate)includingreducedfertilityandpermanentgeneticdamage
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B4.Naturalcapital(9)Nine“criticaltypes”ofnaturalcapital
• ClimateChange.GHGconcentrations(nowpassing400 ppmv),duetohigheremissionsandweakening/reversalofterrestrialcarbonsinks,reachedapointwherelossofsummerpolarsea-iceiscertainlyirreversible.
• Oceanacidification.~quarteroftheCO2 emitteddissolvesinoceans,formingcarbonicacidwhichalteroceanchemistryandrise pHofthesurface. Beyondathreshold,risingaciditymakesithardforcorals,shellfishandplanktonspeciestogrowandsurvive.Surfaceoceanacidityincreasedby30%frompre-industrialtimes.
• Freshwatercycle,stronglyaffectedbyclimatechange;humanpressure asdominantdrivingforceshapingfunctioninganddistributionofglobalfreshwater.consequencesincludeboth global-scalechangesinriverflowsandshiftsinvapour flows.By2050,½ billionpeoplearelikelytobesubject towaterscarcity
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B4.Naturalcapital(10)Nine“criticaltypes”ofnaturalcapital
• Landconvertedtohumanusewhenforests,grasslands,wetlandsandothervegetationtypesareconvertedtoagriculturalland;effectsonbiodiversity,waterflowsandbiogeochemicalcyclingofcarbon,nitrogenandphosphorus.Forestsplayimportantroleincontrollinglanduseandclimate.
• Nitrogenandphosphorusflowstothebiosphereandoceans duetoindustrialandagriculturalprocesses. Nitrogenandphosphorusareessentialelementsforplantgrowth.Humanactivitiesleadtoemissions thatpolluteswaterways andcoastalzonesoraccumulatesintheterrestrialbiosphere. Whentheyendupinaquaticsystems,algaegrowinresponsetohighnutrientsupply,andthenmakesitswaytothe sea
• Atmosphericaerosolloading: importantroleinhydrologicalcycleaffectingcloudformation,patternsofatmosphericcirculation,directeffectonclimate,bychangingsolarradiationthatisreflectedorabsorbedintheatmosphere.Humanschangeaerosolloadingbyemittingatmosphericpollutionandthroughland-usechangethatincreasesreleaseofdustandsmokeintotheair.Inhalinghighlypollutedaircausesroughly800,000peopletodieprematurelyeachyear.
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Will Steffen et al. Science 2015;347:1259855Published by AAAS
Status of control variables for 9planetary boundaries (not quantified for 2, chemicals, aereosols)
• Green zone is the safe operating space
• Red (high-risk): climate, biodiversity, nitrogen cycle)
B4.Naturalcapital(11)Boundariesandtippingpoints
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C.Weakandstrongsustainability(1)
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Twoviewsonsustainability,informingtwomeasurementapproaches
• Weaksustainability,i.e.differenttypesofcapitalcanbesubstitutedwitheachother(e.g.higherhumaninterferencewithclimatesystembecomes“sustainable”whenaccompaniedbyhigherlevelofeconomicorhumancapital)- Requiressingleindex,i.e.commonnumeraire
• Strongsustainability,i.e.sometypesofcapitalsare‘unique’,whatislostwhensomeelementsofcriticalcapitalfallbelowtippingpointcannotbereplacedwithhigherlevelsofanothercapitaltype- Requiresdashboardofindicators,eachwithitsownunit

“Stock” indicators “Flow” indicators Riskfactors
Naturalcapital
• Concentration ofgreenhousegasesintheatmosphere
• Landassets:forestcover• Freshwaterresources
• Greenhousegasemissions
• Annualexposuretoairpollution (PM2.5)
• Freshwaterabstractions
• Threatenedspecies
Humancapital
• Educationalattainment of25-34year• Adultcompetencies(PIAAC)• Cognitiveskillsamong15year-old
students(PISA)• Lifeexpectancyatbirth
• Educationalexpectancy(atage5-39)
• Smokingprevalence• Obesityprevalence• Long-term
unemployment
Socialcapital
• Trust inothers• Trustinpublicinstitutions
• Voterturnout• Volunteeringrates• Governmentstakeholder
engagement
Economiccapital
• Net wealthofhouseholds• Netfinancialwealthofhouseholds• Netfixedassets• Knowledgecapital• Financialnetworthofwholeeconomy
• Grossfixedcapitalformation
• InvestmentinR&D
• Household indebtedness• Financialnetworthofgeneralgovernment
• Leverageofthebankingsector
C.Weakandstrongsustainability(2)
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OECDDashboards

Singleindexes:theory (Arrowetal.)• Inter-temporalsocialwelfare
i.e.inter-temporalsocialwelfareofanygenerationdependsonutilityfromcurrentconsumptionandonutilityoffuturegenerations
• Sustainabilitycriterioni.e.inter-temporalsocialwelfareofanygenerationisnotlowerthanthatoftheprecedinggeneration
• Necessaryconditioni.e.thetotalsumofthechangesindifferenttypesofcapital(valuedattheirshadowprices)mustbepositive(i.e.differenttypesofcapitalareperfectlysubstitutable)
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C.Weakandstrongsustainability(3)

Singleindexes:applications• Genuine(adjustednet)savings(theWorldBank)
– Conceivessustainabilityasrequiringmaintenanceofaconstantstockof“extendedwealth”
– Genuinesavingsaschangeintotalwealthoveraperiod,e.g.year
• Inpractice:– Deductsfromgrossnationalsavingsthecapitalconsumptionofproducedassets,togetnetdomesticsavings
– Addscurrentexpendituresoneducationtonetdomesticsavings,tocaptureinvestmentinhumancapital
– Deductsmonetaryvalueofdepletionofmanynaturalresources,toreflectdeclineinassetvaluesduetoextractionandharvest
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C.Weakandstrongsustainability(4)

Genuinesavingsrate:empiricalevidence
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C.Overallassessmentof‘sustainability’?(5)

• Whataresingleindexesofsustainabilitymissing?– Limitedcoverageofassets– Marketvaluation– Highsavingratesmaydepresscapitalformationbyloweringratesofcapacityutilisation
– Globalresponsibilities(consumptionpatternsinrichcountriesaffectresourcesinotherpartsoftheworld)
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C.Weakandstrongsustainability(6)?

• Externalities.Manyofthenegativeeffectsoncapitalsareconsequencesofeconomicactivitiesimposingcostsonothers:‘polluterpays’principle
• Publicgoods.Mosttypesofcapitaltaketheformof‘publicgoods’(under-providedbymarkets)
• Risksandinsurance:the‘precautionaryprinciple’• Timediscounting.Pay-offoftodays’actionsdependsonhowfuturebenefitsare‘discounted’,i.e.‘timepreference’andassumptionsonfuturewell-being
• Wealthmanagementperspective. “Resourcecurse”(andwaysofavoidingit)
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D.Sustainabilityandpolicymaking(1)

• OECD(2015),“Resourcesforfuturewell-being”,chapter3inHow’sLife2015,OECDPublishing
• UNECE(2014),ConferenceofEuropeanStatisticiansRecommendationsofMeasuringSustainableDevelopment,chapter1to7,Geneva
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