Natural Capital, Sustainability and Productivity: An Exploration of the Linkages
Nancy Olewiler Additional contact information Nancy Olewiler: Professor of Economics, Simon Fraser University
A chapter in The Review of Economic Performance and Social Progress 2002: Towards a Social Understanding of Productivity, 2002, vol. 2 from Centre for the Study of Living Standards
Abstract:
The issue of sustainability of natural capital and implications for economic growth ranks high in the interests of both policy makers and the general public, as manifested by the intense debate on Canada's ratification of the Kyoto accord. In this chapter, Nancy Olewiler makes an important contribution to the debate on natural resource sustainability by exploring the crucial, but often ignored, role of productivity in the maintenance of natural capital sustainability. Olewiler defines sustainability as the ability of the economy to maintain the flow of production necessary to ensure non-decreasing per capita consumption indefinitely, so future generations can have a standard of living equal to or better than that of the present generation. She makes a critical distinction between the concepts of strong and weak sustainability.
More chapters in The Review of Economic Performance and Social Progress from Centre for the Study of Living Standards Address: 151 Slater Street, Suite 710, Ottawa, ON K1P 5H3 Contact information at EDIRC. Series data maintained by Whitney Hamilton ().