Growth theory and ‘green growth'
Smulders, Sjak ; Toman, Michael ; Withagen, Cees
Oxford Review of Economic Policy
2014
30
3
Autumn
423-446
economic growth ; environmental policy ; innovation ; natural resources ; sustainable development
Economic development
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxrep/gru027
English
Bibliogr.
"The relatively new and still amorphous concept of ‘green growth' can be understood as a call for balancing longer-term investments in sustaining environmental wealth with nearer-term income growth to reduce poverty. We draw on a large body of economic theory available for providing insights on such balancing of income growth and environmental sustainability. We show that there is no a priori assurance of substantial positive spillovers from environmental policies to income growth, or for a monotonic transition to a ‘green steady state' along an optimal path. The greenness of an optimal growth path can depend heavily on initial conditions, with a variety of different adjustments occurring concurrently along an optimal path. Factor-augmenting technical-change targeting at offsetting resource depletion is critical to sustaining long-term growth within natural limits on the availability of natural resources and environmental services."
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