Central Planning Gone Wild!

We may need to add a new category: Totalitarian Delusions of Grandeur

You vil live in your pod, eat slurry, and like it! Nothing like modeling “six dimensions of human need satisfaction”.

This paper says all the quiet parts out loud.

Socio-economic conditions for satisfying human needs at low energy use: An international analysis of social provisioning

Author links open overlay panel JefimVogela Julia K.Steinbergerba Daniel W.O’Neilla William F.Lambca JayaKrishnakumarda Sustainability Research Institute, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, UKb Institute of Geography and Sustainability, Faculty of Geosciences and Environment, University of Lausanne, Switzerlandc Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change, Berlin, Germanyd Institute of Economics and Econometrics, Geneva School of Economics and Management, University of Geneva, Switzerland

Received 26 July 2020, Revised 27 April 2021, Accepted 7 May 2021, Available online 29 June 2021.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102287

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Under a Creative Commons license open access

Highlights

  • No country sufficiently meets human needs within sustainable levels of energy use.
  • Need satisfaction and associated energy requirements depend on socio-economic setups.
  • Public services are linked to higher need satisfaction and lower energy requirements.
  • Economic growth is linked to lower need satisfaction and higher energy requirements.
  • Countries with good socio-economic setups could likely meet needs at low energy use.

Abstract

Meeting human needs at sustainable levels of energy use is fundamental for avoiding catastrophic climate change and securing the well-being of all people. In the current political-economic regime, no country does so. Here, we assess which socio-economic conditions might enable societies to satisfy human needs at low energy use, to reconcile human well-being with climate mitigation.

Using a novel analytical framework alongside a novel multivariate regression-based moderation approach and data for 106 countries, we analyse how the relationship between energy use and six dimensions of human need satisfaction varies with a wide range of socio-economic factors relevant to the provisioning of goods and services (‘provisioning factors’). We find that factors such as public service quality, income equality, democracy, and electricity access are associated with higher need satisfaction and lower energy requirements (‘beneficial provisioning factors’). Conversely, extractivism and economic growth beyond moderate levels of affluence are associated with lower need satisfaction and greater energy requirements (‘detrimental provisioning factors’). Our results suggest that improving beneficial provisioning factors and abandoning detrimental ones could enable countries to provide sufficient need satisfaction at much lower, ecologically sustainable levels of energy use.

However, as key pillars of the required changes in provisioning run contrary to the dominant political-economic regime, a broader transformation of the economic system may be required to prioritise, and organise provisioning for, the satisfaction of human needs at low energy use.

Graphical abstract

Keywords

Sustainability Well-being Human needs Energy use Social provisioning Human development

1. Introduction

Limiting global warming to 1.5 °C without relying on negative emissions technologies requires not only rapid decarbonisation of global energy systems but also deep reductions in global energy use (Grubler et al., 2018IPCC, 2018). At the same time, billions of people around the globe are still deprived of basic needs, and current routes to sufficient need satisfaction all seem to involve highly unsustainable levels of resource use (O’Neill et al., 2018). The way societies design their economies thus seems misaligned with the twin goals of meeting everyone’s needs and remaining within planetary boundaries (O’Neill et al., 2018Raworth, 2017). This study addresses this issue by empirically assessing how the relationship between energy use and need satisfaction varies with the configurations of key socio-economic factors, and what configurations of these factors might enable societies to meet human needs within sustainable levels of energy use.

While these questions are poorly understood and empirically understudied (Brand Correa and Steinberger, 2017Lamb and Steinberger, 2017O’Neill et al., 2018Roberts et al., 2020), the corner pieces of the research puzzle are largely in place. We roughly know the maximum level of final energy use (~27 GJ/cap) that can be globally rendered ecologically ‘sustainable’ (compatible with avoiding 1.5 °C of global warming without relying on negative emissions technologies) with deep transformations of energy systems (Grubler et al., 2018IPCC, 2018). We understand what defines and characterises human needs, and what levels of which goods, services and conditions generally satisfy these needs (Doyal and Gough, 1991Max-Neef, 1991Millward-Hopkins et al., 2020Rao and Min, 2018a).

We also know the basic characteristics of the cross-country relationship between energy use and a wide range of needs satisfaction indicators, including life expectancy, mortality, nourishment, education, and access to sanitation and drinking water (Burke, 2020Lambert et al., 2014Mazur and Rosa, 1974Rao et al., 2014Steinberger and Roberts, 2010). While at low levels of energy use, these need satisfaction indicators strongly improve with increasing energy use, they generally saturate at internationally moderate levels of energy use (ibid.). Beyond that saturation level, need satisfaction improvements with additional energy use quickly diminish, reflecting the satiability of needs (Doyal and Gough, 1991).

How much energy use is required to provide sufficient need satisfaction is only scarcely researched, and the few existing estimates are broadly scattered (Rao et al., 2019). Empirical cross-national estimates include 25–40 GJ/cap primary energy use for life expectancy and literacy (Steinberger and Roberts, 2010), or 22–58 GJ/cap final energy use for life expectancy and composite basic needs access (Lamb and Rao, 2015). Empirically-driven bottom-up model studies estimate the final energy footprints of sufficient need satisfaction in India, South Africa and Brazil to range between 12 and 25 GJ/cap (Rao et al., 2019), based on Rao and Min’s (2018a) definition of ‘Decent Living Standards’ that meet human needs. Global bottom-up modelling studies involving stronger assumptions of technological efficiency and equity, respectively, suggest that by 2050, Decent Living Standards could be internationally provided with 27 GJ/cap (Grubler et al., 2018) or even just 13–18 GJ/cap final energy use (Millward-Hopkins et al., 2020). Together, these studies demonstrate that meeting everyone’s needs at sustainable levels of energy use is theoretically feasible with known technology.

What remains poorly understood, however, is how the relationship between human need satisfaction and energy use (or biophysical resource use) varies with different socio-economic factors (Lamb and Steinberger, 2017O’Neill et al., 2018Steinberger et al., 2020). A small number of studies offer initial insights. The environmental efficiency of life satisfaction, presented as a measure of sustainability, follows an inverted-U-shape with Gross Domestic Product (GDP), increases with trust, and decreases with income inequality (Knight and Rosa, 2011). The carbon or environmental intensities of life expectancy, understood as measures of unsustainability, increase with income inequality (Jorgenson, 2015), urbanisation (McGee et al., 2017) and world society integration (Givens, 2017). They furthermore follow a U-shape with GDP internationally (Dietz et al., 2012), though increasing with GDP in all regions but Africa (Jorgenson, 2014Jorgenson and Givens, 2015), and show asymmetric relationships with economic growth and recession in ‘developed’ vs. ‘less developed’ countries (Greiner and McGee, 2020). Their associations with uneven trade integration and exchange vary with levels of development (Givens, 2018). Democracy is not significantly correlated with the environmental efficiency of life satisfaction (Knight and Rosa, 2011) nor with the energy intensity of life expectancy (Mayer, 2017). All of these studies either combine need satisfaction outcomes from societal activity and biophysical means to societal activity into a ratio metric, or analyse residuals from their regression. Hence, they do not specify how these socio-economic factors interact with the highly non-linear relationship between need satisfaction and biophysical resource use, or with the ability of countries to reach targets simultaneously for need satisfaction and energy (or resource) use.

The socio-economic conditions for satisfying human needs at low energy use have been highlighted as crucial areas of research (Brand Correa and Steinberger, 2017Lamb and Steinberger, 2017O’Neill et al., 2018Roberts et al., 2020), but remain virtually unstudied. While the theoretical understanding of this issue has seen important advances (Bohnenberger, 2020Hickel, 2020Stratford, 2020Stratford and O’Neill, 2020Gough, 2017Kallis et al., 2020Parrique, 2019), empirical studies are almost entirely absent. Lamb, 2016aLamb, 2016b qualitatively discusses socio-economic factors in enabling low-energy (or low-carbon) development, but only for a small number of countries. Furthermore, Lamb et al. (2014) explore the cross-country relationship between life expectancy and carbon emissions in light of socio-economic drivers of emissions, but do not quantitatively assess how life expectancy is related to carbon emissions nor to socio-economic emissions drivers. Quantitative empirical cross-country analyses of the issue thus remain entirely absent.

We address these research gaps by making three contributions. First, we develop a novel analytical approach for empirically assessing the role of socio-economic factors as intermediaries moderating the relationship between energy use (as a means) and need satisfaction (as an end), thus analytically separating means, ends and intermediaries (Fig. 1). For this purpose, we adapt and operationalise a novel analytical framework proposed by O’Neill et al. (2018) which centres on provisioning systems as intermediaries between biophysical resource use and human well-being (Fig. 1A). Second, we apply this approach and framework for the first time, using data for 19 indicators and 106 countries to empirically analyse how the relationships between energy use and six dimensions of human need satisfaction vary with a range of political, economic, geographic and infrastructural ‘provisioning factors’ (Fig. 1B). Third, we assess which socio-economic conditions (i.e. which configurations of provisioning factors) might enable countries to provide sufficient need satisfaction within sustainable levels of energy use. Specifically, we address the following research questions:1)

What levels of energy use are associated with sufficient need satisfaction in the current international provisioning regime?2)

How does the relationship between energy use and human need satisfaction vary with the configurations of different provisioning factors?3)

Which configurations of provisioning factors are associated with socio-ecologically beneficial performance (higher achievements in, and lower energy requirements of, human need satisfaction), and which ones are associated with socio-ecologically detrimental performance (lower achievements in, and greater energy requirements of, need satisfaction)?4)

To what extent could countries with beneficial configurations of key provisioning factors achieve sufficient need satisfaction within sustainable levels of energy use?

The remainder of this article is structured as follows. We introduce our analytical framework and outline our analytical approach in Section 2. We describe our variables and data in Section 3, and detail our methods in Section 4. We present the results of our analysis in Section 5, and discuss them in Section 6. We summarise and conclude our analysis in Section 7.

2. Analytical framework and approach

Building on the work of O’Neill et al. (2018), our analytical framework (Fig. 1A) conceptualises the provisioning of human needs satisfaction in an Ends–Means spectrum (Daly, 1973). Our framework considers energy use as a means, and need satisfaction as an end, with provisioning factors as intermediaries that moderate the relationship between means and ends. We thus operationalise O’Neill et al.’s (2018) framework by reducing the sphere of biophysical resource use to energy use (for analytical focus), and reducing the sphere of human well-being to human need satisfaction (for analytical coherence). Our operationalisation of human need satisfaction follows Doyal and Gough’s (1991) Theory of Human Need, reflecting a eudaimonic understanding of well-being as enabled by the satisfaction of human needs, which can be evaluated based on objective measures (Brand Correa and Steinberger, 2017Lamb and Steinberger, 2017).

The main advancement of our framework consists in operationalising the concept of provisioning systems (Brand Correa and Steinberger, 2017Fanning et al., 2020Lamb and Steinberger, 2017O’Neill et al., 2018) by introducing the concept of ‘provisioning factors’.

Provisioning factors comprise all factors that characterise any element realising, or any aspect influencing, the provisioning of goods and services. This includes economic, political, institutional, infrastructural, geographic, technical, cultural and historical characteristics of provisioning systems (or the provisioning process), spanning the spheres of extraction, production, distribution, consumption and disposal. In other words, provisioning factors encompass all factors that affect how energy and resources are used to meet human needs (and other ends). For example, it matters whether provisioning caters to consumers with equal or unequal purchasing power, whether it occurs in an urban or rural context, in a growing or shrinking economy, whether electricity is available, and what transport infrastructure is in place. Provisioning factors are intermediaries that moderate the relationship between energy use and need satisfaction. Whereas provisioning systems are broad conceptual constructs that are difficult to measure, provisioning factors are tangible and measureable, and as such operational: provisioning factors characterise provisioning systems (or the provisioning process).

While interactions between energy use, provisioning factors and social outcomes may in principle go in all directions (Fanning et al., 2020O’Neill et al., 2018), our focus here is on the role of provisioning factors for countries’ socio-ecological performance, i.e. their achievements in, and energy requirements of, human need satisfaction (Fig. 1A). We use regression-based moderation analysis (Section 4.2) to assess how the relationship between energy use and need satisfaction varies with different provisioning factors, and subsequently model that relationship for different configurations of each provisioning factor (Fig. 1B). We further estimate how multiple provisioning factors jointly interact with the relationship between need satisfaction and energy use, using multivariate regression analysis (Section 4.3). While these are established statistical techniques, the way we apply them to our analytical framework and research questions is novel. Our approach allows us to coherently assess and compare the interactions of a broad range of provisioning factors, not just with need satisfaction or its ratio with energy use, but with the relationship between need satisfaction and energy use, across the international spectrum.

The variables assessed in our analytic framework (listed in Fig. 1A and detailed in Table 1Table 2) capture key dimensions of human need, key categories of provisioning (state provision, political economy, physical infrastructure and geography) as well as total final energy use. Based on our understanding of human need theory (Doyal and Gough, 1991Max-Neef, 1991) and provisioning systems (Brand Correa and Steinberger, 2017Gough, 2019O’Neill et al., 2018Fanning et al., 2020), we analyse electricity access, democratic quality and income equality as provisioning factors (intermediaries) rather than as indicators of human need satisfaction (outcomes).

Table 1. Human need satisfaction variables used in the analysis.

Variable nameDescription and [units]Sufficiency thresholdIndicator source
Healthy life expectancyAverage healthy life expectancy at birth [years]65 yearsIHME GBD
Sufficient nourishmentPercentage of population meeting dietary energy requirements [%], calculated as the reverse of Prevalence of undernoursihment, rescaled onto a scale from 0 to 100%95%WB WDI 2020
Drinking water accessPercentage of population with access to improved water source [%]95%WB WDI 2017
Safe sanitation accessPercentage of population with access to improved sanitation facilities [%]95%WB WDI 2017
Basic educationEducation index [score]score of 75UNDP HDR
Minimum incomeAbsence of income shortfall below $3.20/day [%], calculated as the reverse of the Poverty gap at $3.20 a day (2011 PPP)95%WB WDI 2020

Saturation transformations are applied to all need satisfaction variables (see Supplementary Materials Section C.4.2). Indicator sources are: the Global Burden of Disease Study (IHME GBD; Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, 2017), the World Development Indicators (WB WDI; World Bank, 2017World Bank, 2020), and the Human Development Report 2013 (UNDP HDR; UNDP, 2013).

Table 2. Provisioning factor variables used in the analysis.

Variable nameDescription and [units]Trans-formation appliedIndicator source
Electricity accessPercentage of population with access to electricity [%]SaturationWB WDI 2017
Access to clean fuelsPercentage of population with access to non-solid fuels [%]SaturationWB WDI 2017
Trade & transport infrastructureQuality of trade and transport-related infrastructure [score], component of the Logistics performance indexIdentityWB WDI 2017
Urban populationPercentage of population living in urban areas [%]IdentityWB WDI 2017
Public service qualityQuality of public services, civil service, and policy implementation [score], calculated as Government effectiveness, rescaled onto a scale from 1 to 6IdentityWB WGI
Public health coveragePercentage of total health expenditure covered by government, non-governmental organisations, and social health insurance funds [%]IdentityWB WDI 2017
Democratic qualityAbility to participate in selecting government, freedom of expression and association, free media [score], calculated as Voice and accountability, rescaled onto a scale from 1 to 6SaturationWB WGI
Income equalityEquality in household disposable income [score], calculated as the reverse of the Gini indexSaturationSWIID
Economic growth3-year (2010–2012) average percentage annual growth rate of GDP per capita in constant 2011 $ PPP [%], calculated based on Gujarati, 1995, pp. 169–171IdentityWB WDI 2017
ExtractivismShare of total value generation obtained from total natural resource rents [% of GDP]LogarithmicWB WDI 2017
Foreign direct investmentsShare of foreign direct investments (net inflow) in total value generation [% of GDP]LogarithmicWB WDI 2017
Trade penetrationShare of total value generation that is traded [% of GDP], calculated as Importvalue+ExportvalueIdentityWB WDI 2020

Indicator sources are: the World Development Indicators (WB WDI; World Bank, 2017World Bank, 2020), the Worldwide Governance Indicators (WB WGI; World Bank, 2018Kaufmann et al., 2011), and the Standardized World Income Inequality Database v6.2 (SWIID; Solt, 2020).

Read the full paper here.

And don’t miss the following section, emphasis mine:

6.4. Paradigmatic provisioning factors: Economic growth and (in)equality

Our findings challenge the influential claim that economic growth is beneficial to human well-being. In fact, our results suggest that at moderate or high levels of energy use, economic growth is associated with socio-ecologically detrimental performance (lower achievements in, and greater energy requirements of, need satisfaction). Given the close coupling between economic activity and energy use (Steinberger et al., 2020), these findings imply that economic growth beyond moderate levels of affluence is socio-ecologically detrimental. At low levels of energy use (currently corresponding to low levels of affluence), economic growth exhibits no significant association with need satisfaction. Joint analysis with other provisioning factors corroborates the adverse outcomes associated with economic growth (Supplementary materials Table B.2). These findings run contrary to the near-universal policy goal of fostering economic growth. Due to our novel approach of analysing economic growth as a provisioning factor, our results analytically integrate multiple critiques of growth: the social limits and detriments of growth (Hirsch, 1976Kallis, 2019Mishan and Mishan, 1967O’Neill, 2015); the ecological unsustainability of growth (Dietz and O’Neill, 2013Jackson, 2017Kallis, 2018Kallis, 2019); and the incompatibility of growth with limiting global warming to 1.5 °C (Antonakakis et al., 2017D’Alessandro et al., 2020Haberl et al., 2020Hickel and Kallis, 2020). Abandoning the pursuit of economic growth beyond moderate levels of affluence thus appears ecologically necessary and socially desirable. Rendering a non-growing economy socially sustainable will require a fundamental political-economic transformation to remove structural and institutional growth dependencies (Hickel, 2020Hinton, 2020Kallis et al., 2020Parrique, 2019Stratford, 2020Stratford and O’Neill, 2020).

Our findings also add new perspectives to the controversial debate on how income (in)equality relates to energy use and carbon emissions (Grunewald et al., 2017Jorgenson et al., 2016Oswald et al., 2021Rao and Min, 2018b). By assessing income equality as a provisioning factor, our analysis integrates previous findings related to both biophysical resource use and social outcomes. The positive association we find between income equality and socio-ecological performance supports claims that improving income equality is compatible with rapid climate mitigation (D’Alessandro et al., 2020Oswald et al., 2021Rao and Min, 2018b), beneficial for social outcomes (Wilkinson and Pickett, 2010) and favourable (Jorgenson, 2015Knight and Rosa, 2011Oswald et al., 2021) or even required (Gough, 2017) for reconciling human well-being with ecological sustainability. These findings are particularly important as inequality is on the rise in many countries (Piketty and Saez, 2014), and as efforts to limit resource use could lead to escalating inequality through intensified economic rent extraction (Stratford, 2020). Taken together, these analyses provide a strong case for redistributive policies that establish both minimum and maximum income and/or consumption levels (Alexander, 2014Fuchs and Di Giulio, 2016Gough, 2020).

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July 5, 2021 12:39 pm

Judging by all the papers cited in this ‘study’ it appears none of these ‘scientists’ are aware of the replication crisis.

According to the Editor of The Lancet, up to 50% of medical studies are useless.

Climate science is even less well understood than medical science and, frankly, there’s no possibility of a double blind study anyway so conclusions are, at best, highly questionable.

Judging by those criteria alone, I would hazard a guess that substantially fewer that 50% of climate related studies are even moderately credible consigning this study to the garbage bin of life.

peter jones
Reply to  HotScot
July 9, 2021 4:11 am

An interesting addition to your post, we are aware of only one experimental attempt to observe and measure the greenhouse effect in regard to Co2, it was done in Europe a little over a year ago peer reviewed and published.
They were able to observe and measure atmospheric Co2 absorbing long wave IR radiation and re radiating it in all directions as per the standard Greenhouse hypothesis, however in run after run try as they might they were UNABLE to observe and measure ANY atmospheric warming.
This WILL need replication (dont hold your breath, in this case i think the old barristers dictum will prevail, “Never ask your client if they are guilty”).
Now if they cannot measure warming in the simplest atmosphere inside an experimental chamber, without the many complicating factors of the real atmosphere, then either the warming produced is VERY small (too small to be detected with the devices used) or the experimental design was very poor, or perhaps re radiated IR radiation packets DO NOT warm, that would be in line with the dispute on the issue amongst physicists thats been going on for decades due to the second law of thermodynamics.
Time may tell, but the real point of this IS, this should have been settled decades ago by government funded scientific work before they started spending trillions.
I am reminded of Alice in Wonderland, drink from the little bottle and the temperatures get VERY BIG.

n.n
July 5, 2021 12:40 pm

A Twilight faith (i.e. conflation of logical domains). A Pro-Choice, selective, opportunistic, relativistic (“ethical”) religion. They think that they can abort the baby, cannibalize her profitable parts, sequester her carbon pollutants, and have her, too. A wicked solution to a purportedly hard problem (e.g. selective-child that denies the dignity and agency of women and men). From Jew privilege to White privilege to human privilege, they are playing with a double-edged scalpel, but precedent(s) shows us that people will take a knee to mortal gods and goddesses, experts, too, and bray in consensus or intimidation.

July 5, 2021 12:45 pm

The people who wrote this need to read some history and then ask themselves what happened to the educated academia under Mao and Pol Pot among others. Same for the rich. The rich need people to purchase their goods in order to have money. Without people their riches will mean nothing unless tyranny is used to enslave the poor slobs to serve the riche peoples needs.

July 5, 2021 12:52 pm

“...will require a fundamental political-economic transformation to remove structural and institutional growth dependencies.”

Big Brother is written all over that statement.

“Big Brother is watching you”:
“Big Brother loves you.”

Of course they mean that the 0.1%, i.e. our “Betters” the politically connected elites, will live on in their current private jet and mega yacht lifestyles.

China already has its Social Credit System, which the political leftist elites want to bring and impose of us in the West, and call it sustainability. What they mean is sustainability for indulgent lifestyles of the rich & famous. You and me, well… we will be transformed or we will be sent to re-education, like the CCP and Emperor Xi has lovingly done for the Uighurs.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Credit_System

Dave Fair
July 5, 2021 1:18 pm

“World government will decide what you need and provide it via 5-year plans.” Given that statement, there is no need for all this study. “You will own nothing and be happy (or else).” I guess this is the next step beyond Marxism.

July 5, 2021 1:19 pm

“fundamental for avoiding catastrophic climate change”

Since catastrophic climate change is not going to happen all the rest is just bovine excrement.

Duane
July 5, 2021 1:23 pm

I could only manage to read the first few paragraphs without gagging and severe eye-rolling.

Academic masturbation here, nothing more.

Global Cooling
July 5, 2021 1:24 pm

We, the people, can be both prosperous and sustainable. There is no need to return to the age of wind mills and horse carts. Just add freedom, market economy, rule of law and innovations do the rest.

dk_
July 5, 2021 1:35 pm

Seems like a paper that someone like Bjorn Lomborg could easily disprove. If the data sources are World Bank and and “the Standardized World Income Inequality Database” the presentation is hollow argument from the start.

Paul Johnson
July 5, 2021 1:55 pm

In the Graphical Abstract, all of the Beneficial provisioning factors are enhanced by economic growth and prosperity, yet Economic Growth is listed as a Detrimental provisioning factor. Only an ivory tower could generate such a massive logical disconnect.

Jarrett C Rhoades
Reply to  Paul Johnson
July 6, 2021 5:52 pm

These buffons are post-modern Death Cultists: anything to do with life — like growth or breath (CO2) — they are dead-set against.

Thomas Gasloli
July 5, 2021 1:58 pm

This is what happens when stupid people try to cover their ignorance with big words.

And it isn’t a coincidence that the result always pushes a leftist totalitarian ideology. Stupid people think totalitarianism is the “smart” solution.

Reply to  Thomas Gasloli
July 5, 2021 5:34 pm

They’re not stupid or ignorant, they’re evil. If one wanted to be charitable, one could say they’re ignorant of the misery that socialism / central planning has brought about since the beginning of the last century, but I son’t see how any sentient creature could be so unaware. So that leaves either stupid {incapable of learning) or evil (willing to cause human suffering) as choices. Since they’re highly educated, that leaves evil as the only choice. QED.

peter jones
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
July 9, 2021 4:16 am

When you read the writings of the early 20th century Fabian socialists, it is clear they think like sociopaths.

Bruce Cobb
July 5, 2021 2:00 pm

Shirley they can’t be Sirius.

John Pickens
July 5, 2021 2:05 pm

The Chinese are starting to realize that, under socialism, working harder does not lead to economic reward.

The solution: “lying Flat”.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/radiichina.com/laying-flat-involution/amp/

July 5, 2021 2:07 pm

sigh
Poor old Leeds again.
and that timid mouse like (and rather creepy) little Stoneburger woman who got a round of applause from the lecture theatre when she, barely audible, told the assembled throng that she ‘cycled to work’

Its coming though:
Headline:”MPs vote for ‘draconian’ protest laws“From the Independant

Why are our leaders so paranoid, so frightened of the folks who voted for them
wtf is going on/wrong here

josh scandlen
July 5, 2021 3:01 pm

No way our economy grows much once the millenials take charge. People who think they’ll get historic rates of return on their stock portfolio really need to look at reality.

Trying to Play Nice
July 5, 2021 3:20 pm

As I read this on the day we celebrate the birth of the United States, it makes me even more thankful. I am thankful that we have a 2nd Amendment to our Constitution that the Founding Fathers were smart enough to write in so the citizens could protect themselves against morons like these.

Reply to  Trying to Play Nice
July 5, 2021 4:17 pm

2nd amendment wasnt written for peoples protection against politicians. Their idea was that the military forces would support the President as the commander and he might overthrow the republic with that support – example was the Roman republic became a monarchy.
The Militia , not the general public, was so the local leaders could resist that, which is why the national Guard is state controlled.
There is no danger from a German PhD students thesis

Reply to  Duker
July 5, 2021 6:02 pm

“There is no danger from a German PhD students thesis”

Per se, no. But if the substance of the thesis accurately reflects the ‘zeitgeist’ of any government, the population subject to that government is in big trouble.

Reply to  Frank from NoVA
July 5, 2021 7:27 pm

Democracy is the answer not the 2nd amendment which for citizens makes them effectively powerless with only a handgun for use at home the only weapon that cant be regulated– according to the Supreme court

MarkW
Reply to  Duker
July 6, 2021 1:19 pm

People go hunting with handguns?
Just where the heck are you digging this nonsense up from?

Bryan A
Reply to  MarkW
July 6, 2021 3:58 pm

About the only thing people hunt with Hand Guns is Money at the Corner Store and empty cans. Although sometimes the Endangered Home Invader presents itself in the middle of the living room

MarkW
Reply to  Duker
July 6, 2021 1:18 pm

I don’t know where you are getting your nonsense from, but the writings of the actual founding fathers directly contradicts what you want to believe.

It was Thomas Jefferson who wrote that the tree of liberty must be watered from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.

This was also a group of people who had just finished using their own guns against the politicians of their day.

joe belford
Reply to  Trying to Play Nice
July 5, 2021 4:50 pm

The birth date is March 4th, 1789, the day the Constitution took effect. The Declaration of Independence has no legal authority

Reply to  joe belford
July 5, 2021 6:27 pm

” The Declaration of Independence has no legal authority”

Maybe not under our so-called Constitutional case law system. But you have to admit it seems odd that the Declaration would go on at length to define what type of government would be worthy of the consent of the governed for purposes of declaring independence from Britain, and then just become moot as subsequent rulers under the Constitution enacted whatever powers they deemed expedient. Sorry, but if you buy that, you are implicitly accepting Lysander Spooner’s argument that the Constitution has no authority.

Reply to  Frank from NoVA
July 5, 2021 7:33 pm

The reality is the basic law is the Constitution and all other laws follow from that. Declaration of Independence was superseded once the revolution had been won, as of course it must. The principles are largely enduring, but not in a legal form.

Olen
July 5, 2021 3:25 pm

They just equaled and analyzed the family jewels off Western Civilization, Their qualifications are certified by job title.

John the Econ
July 5, 2021 3:39 pm

Oh, all that reading to say “totalitarianism”.

July 5, 2021 4:10 pm

Jefim Vogel, the lead researcher is only a PhD student…. this would seem to be his thesis

Has no background in economics or even ecology as it appears he trained as meteorologist in Germany and Norway

  • BSc, Physics of the Earth System (Meteorology, Physical Oceanography, Geophysics) at Kiel University
  • MSc, Climate Dynamics (Meteorology and Oceanography) at University of Bergen
Robert of Ottawa
July 5, 2021 4:34 pm

Why don’t these people just come out and say we need to kill 6/7th of the world’s population (and not my 1/7th. pof course).

Reply to  Robert of Ottawa
July 5, 2021 7:36 pm

Just propose they be given a tesla powerwall battery and solar roof panels and told to live within that. When it runs out on the second day or so , which it must without a mains backup feed, and they dont wont to live around one light bulb. They will reconsider

rah
July 5, 2021 4:53 pm

Sorry guys. Life is just too short for me to spend more than a few seconds scanning this kind of crap. Based on that scan it seems to me the authors would probably approve of the handlers of the sock puppet in the WH sending federal troops down to try and end the enforcement of immigrations laws congress passed by the reinforcement sent to Texas from other states.

Reply to  rah
July 5, 2021 7:37 pm

You are as much a fantacyst as they are

Cliff Hilton
July 5, 2021 5:10 pm

Quite fascinating. Please indulge us. I want to observe you living out this prescription, for, let’s say, your whole life. THEN, I can say, with certainty, you have found the answer to no problem. Let your life be a testimony, whether for or against your own prescription. Carry on!

Geoff Sherrington
July 5, 2021 5:28 pm

Poorly educated authors evaluating quality of education. Authors who ver earned riches describing the satisfaction of wealth. Would not surprise me to find one or more of the authors was fat from overeating, while telling others how much food they need. Pots, black kettles. Horrible junk paper. Geoff S

Randy Steck
July 5, 2021 6:24 pm

Exactly the argument tyrants throughout history have made: “I know the answer to all your problems and will force you to accept it because I am smarter, wiser, and more righteous than you.”.

KcTaz
July 5, 2021 6:34 pm

Key sentence, “Democracy is not significantly correlated with the environmental efficiency of life satisfaction (Knight and Rosa, 2011) nor with the energy intensity of life expectancy…”

Their “study” is a nothing but a re-write of “The Communist Manifesto.”