Cover image for Bioeconomics and sustainability : Essays in honor of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen
Title:
Bioeconomics and sustainability : Essays in honor of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen
Publication Information:
Cheltenham Glos, UK : Edward Elgar 1999
ISBN:
9781858986678

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000004821454 HC79.E5 B56 1999 Open Access Book Book
Searching...
Searching...
30000004821413 HC79.E5 B56 1999 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen was described by Paul Samuelson as 'an economist's economist'. This book honors him by discussing his theories on a wide range of issues but particularly on environmental and energy economics. It is a dynamic tribute which extends his work to address the problems the human race will face in the 21st century.

The book shows how Georgescu-Roegen constructed nothing less than an almost complete theoretical alternative to neoclassical economics. Although best-known for his later work as an environmentalist and his work on energy and material transformation, Georgescu-Roegen also made seminal contributions to the economic theory of utility and production and is considered to be one of the founders of modern mathematical economics. In this book an internationally acclaimed group of contributors including Joan Martinez-Alier, William H. Miernyk, Herman Daly and Cutler Cleveland present discussions on environmental and energy economics as well as mathematical economics, economic development and peasant economies, and bioeconomics.

This book serves as an excellent all-inclusive introduction to the work of one of the great economists of the 20th century. This celebration of the contributions made by Georgescu-Roegen will be of interest to environmental and natural resource economists, as well as social and economic theorists.

With a dedication by Wassily Leontief and a foreword by Paul Samuelson.


Author Notes

Wassily Leontief is a Russian-born American economist and educator. After graduating from the University of Berlin, he worked briefly as a research associate with the (U.S.) National Bureau of Economic Research, where he did preliminary work on what is now known as an input-output model. He taught at Harvard University and then at New York University, where he founded the Institute for Economic Analysis. His Nobel Prize in 1973 was awarded for his work on input-output studies.

Input-output analysis is a technique for determining how various sectors of the economy interact. Leontief's first input-output table consisted of a 44-sector model of the U.S. economy arranged in the form of a matrix, with columns and rows for each of the sectors. When purchases in a column are added, the result is the total amount of resources, or "inputs," required by the sector. Sales, or "outputs," in any given row represent the output of the sector. The value of the model is that it provides an overall picture of interdependencies among sectors, so that economists can determine how changes in one sector will affect performance in other sectors. The methodology is described in great detail in Leontief's classic Input-Output Economics (1966); a more specific application of the methodology can be found in his Future Impact of Automation on Workers (1986). The latter explores worker displacement by computer-based automation in U.S. manufacturing, office work, and education and health care industries.

Today input-output models have a broad following, with some containing as many as 1,000 sectors. Leontief's models are used by the Pentagon, the World Bank, the United Nations, and over 30 countries for budgeting and economic prediction. Numerous other specialized applications of the model have been used in waste disposal management, pollution control, and even world disarmament.

(Bowker Author Biography)


Table of Contents

ForewordPaul Samuelson
1 Introduction
2 How Long can Neoclassical Economists Ignore the Contributions of Georgescu-Roegen?
3 From Political Economy to Political Ecology
4 Georgescu-Roegen's Evolutionary Economics
5 Economic Growth Theory and the Georgescu-Roegen Paradigm
6 Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen's Approach to Economic Value
7 Georgescu-Roegen on Consumer Theory
8 Biophysical Economics
9 From Agrarianism to Entropy
10 Embodied Energy Analysis, Sraffa's Analysis, Georgescu-Roegen's Flow-fund Model and Viability of Solar Technology
11 Production and Time
12 A Theory of Resilient Flow-fund Linkages
13 The Passage from Entropy to Thermodynamic Indeterminacy
14 Biophysical Roots of 'Enjoyment of Life' According to Georgescu-Roegen's Bioeconomic Paradigm
15 The Role of Entropy and Energy in Natural Resource Economics
16 Five Conditions for Sustainable Living Systems
Bibliography
Index
ContributorsC.J. Cleveland and H.E. Daly and S. De Gleria and S. Funtowicz and M. Giampietro and J.M. Gowdy and G.A. Lozada and J. Martinez-Alier and K. Mayumi and S. Mesner and W.H. Miernyk and M. Morroni and M. O'Connor and G. Pastore and P.A. Samuelson and R. Scazzieri and A. Tsuchida and F.-D. Vivien and S. Zamagni