生态经济学与海洋

G. Sabau
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摘要

20世纪80年代,由于一些生态学家和经济学家希望共同探索自然系统和经济系统之间复杂的相互作用,生态经济学作为一个跨学科的研究领域诞生了。主要目的是为可持续经济找到切实可行的解决办法。与主流经济学不同,生态经济学将人类经济视为更大但有限、封闭和不增长的全球生态系统的一个开放子系统。因此,它的功能应该遵循同样不变的物理定律——热力学第一和第二定律——以及用能量和物质流动来解释的生物原理这意味着,资源从生态系统通过经济子系统并作为废物返回生态系统的生物物理吞吐量存在客观限制。这也意味着,比起目前已经超越地球极限的无限增长经济,一种有意将产量最小化而不是将消费最大化的稳态经济(steady-state economy)更“自然”生态经济学的主要目标是资源的有效配置、收入和财富的公平分配以及宏观经济规模的可持续发展。虽然通过相对价格进行竞争的市场是有效分配资源的政策工具,但公平分配和最佳规模是社会优先事项,必须根据科学和道德判断,而不是根据主观的支付意愿计算,集体决定。它们的实施需要旨在使手段与其他目的相匹配的政策。生态经济学假设存在最终手段和最终目的,人类在整个目的-手段范围内做出选择(图1)。最终手段是稀缺的,而且
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ecological Economics and the Ocean
Ecological economics was born as a transdisciplinary field of enquiry in the 1980s out of some ecologists’ and economists’ desire to work together to explore the intricate interactions between natural and economic systems. A principal aim was to find practical solutions for a sustainable economy. Unlike mainstream economics, ecological economics sees the human economy as an open subsystem of the larger but finite, closed, and non-growing global ecosystem. Consequently, its functioning should be governed by the same immutable physical laws—the first and second laws of thermodynamics—and biological principles, explained in terms of energy and material flows.1 This implies that there are objective limits to the biophysical throughput of resources from the ecosystem, through the economic subsystem, and back to the ecosystem as waste. It also implies that a steady-state economy, which deliberately minimizes throughput rather than maximizing consumption,2 is more ‘natural’ than the current unlimited growth economy that has exceeded planetary boundaries.3 The main goals of ecological economics are efficient allocation of resources, just income and wealth distribution, as well as sustainable scale of the macroeconomy. While competitive markets through relative prices are the policy instrument for efficient resource allocation, just distribution and an optimal scale are social priorities that must be collectively decided on, based on science and ethical judgements rather than on subjective willingness-to-pay calculations. Their implementation requires policies designed to match means to alternative ends. Ecological economics assumes that there are ultimate means and ultimate ends, and that humans make choices along the entire ends-means spectrum (Figure 1). The ultimate means, which are scarce and
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