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Summary basic principles of sustainable and responsible E. - 2de Bach - handelswetenschappen campus Antwerpen

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Basic principles of sustainable and responsible business and economics
Ch 1: introduction

ethics, responsibility and sustainability (ERS)
~ethics: multidisciplinary field (philosophy, psychology, economics, organizational theory)
2 approaches:
-​ normative ethics: what is right or wrong?
-​ descriptive ethics: why do people actually make certain decisions?

~responsibility: integrating and balancing, economic/financial, ecological/environmental
and social while pursuing organizational goals and contributing positively to society
⇒ what organizations do and how they act responsibly

~sustainability: Brundtland “Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs”
⇒ future orientations regarding complex and wicked social, environmental, and economic
challenges, meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs,

-​ economic → financial, profit
-​ social → people, society
-​ environmental → planet, ecological

history of sustainability thinking
→ concerns about sustainability are not new

1.​ Malthus (1798): population growth vs limited resources
: population grows exponentially but food production grows linearly
⇒ gap between population size and available resources

2.​ Jevons (1865): the coal question
: technological efficiency doesn’t automatically reduce resource use
→ increased efficiency can lead to higher total consumption
= Jevons paradox

3.​ Carson (1962): silent spring
: pollution harms ecosystems ⇒ human actions have unintended side effects
→ economic activity can cause serious and lasting environmental harm

4.​ Boulding (1968): spaceship earth
: earth = closed systems ⇒ limited resources, no unlimited waste disposal
→ the economy is constrained by the physical limits of the planet

5.​ the limits of growth (1972)
: exponential growth in population & economy combined with finite resources
→ leads to overshoot and collapse if no changes occur

,⇒ finite planet and exponential growth = unsustainable system

Brundtland report: core of sustainable development
: brundland definition had 2 key ideas

➢​ needs (beyond income or consumption)
-​ physiological: water, air, food, sleep
-​ safety: stability, security
-​ social: relations, beloning
-​ esteem: dignity, self-respect
-​ self-actualization: growth, meaning

➢​ limitations → imposed by technology, social organisation, environmental capacity

sustainability = also about equity (not only environmental)
⇒ includes fairness and distribution

2 dimensions of equity
1.​ intragenerational equity: fairness within current generation, rich vs. poor today
2.​ intergenerational equity: fairness between present and future generations

trade-offs in sustainability
: tensions between present needs and future needs
→ non-renewable resources: extraction today reduces future availability
→ renewable resources: can be irreversible (overfishing, deforestation)

ability (=vermogen)
⇒ ability of future generations depends on what we leave behind

total capital = natural + physical + human + institutional
~natural capital: ecosystems, biodiversity, atmosphere
~physical capital: infrastructure, technology
~human: education, skills, health
~institutional: governance, rule of law

operational models

➔​ triple bottom line/ 3P’s
people - planet - profit

➔​ 5P’s
people - planet - profit - prosperity (=welvaart) - partnership - peace

sustainable development goals (SDG’s)
: 17 goals set by the UN used for strategy development, policy evaluation, sustainability

idea of embeddedness
→ economy and society are embedded in the biosphere, not separate from it

, Ch 2: views on sustainability and their assumptions

different worldviews on the relationship between economy, society, environment
⇒ ERS framework (ethics, responsibility, sustainability)

economic system: production, consumption, trade, wealth creation
social system: people, culture, equity, institutions
environmental system: ecosystems, natural resources, planetary limits

disparate - - → subsuming - - → intertwined - - → embedded
(economy-centered)​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ (ecology-centered)

1)​ disparate view, “the economy is separate”
→ traditional, neoclassical economic view
→ markets (left-alone) will regulate themselves efficiently
ex. ExxonMobil

➔​ systems are independent: companies shouldn’t engage in non-economic systems
(society, environment ⇒ economy dominates)

➔​ invisible hand will regulate everything (problems will be regulated by the price)

➔​ company’s main focus = profit maximization (reducing costs, impact on people =
income)

sustainability is optional → not part of core business
+​ environmental problems = externalities (costs for society, not the firm)

criticisms
-​ ignores the social and environmental needs (financial performance only)
-​ leads to pollution, inequality and depletion of resources

2)​ subsuming view, “sustainability for business advantage”
​ → strategic and instrumental approach
→ still prioritizes profit but acknowledges that long-term profitability depends on
social stability and ecological balance
​ ex. Nestlé, coca-cola

➔​ systems are nested: economy is the center, society and environment support

➔​ social and environmental actions are valuable if they generate business benefits

➔​ shared value model: firms can create economic value by creating societal value

sustainability becomes part of strategy, innovation and competitiveness

, criticisms
-​ the profit motive still dominates
-​ Instrumental approach: social and environmental needs are only addressed for
market opportunities

3)​ intertwined view, “triple bottom line” → people, planet, profit
→ economy, society and environment are interconnected
→ equal importance, firms must balance their responsibilities
ex. interface (carpet manufacturer)

➔​ no hierarchy: all 3 are interdependent (dependent on each other)
: balance, not dominance of one system over another

➔​ 3P’s or triple bottom line (TBL) model measures beyond only profit
: balance between people, planet, profit

companies produce integrated sustainability reports (financial + non-financial performance)
⇒ encourages long-term thinking and innovation

criticisms:
-​ difficult to measure the non-financial results (trade-offs) consistently
-​ profit may still dominate
-​ can degenerate into box-thinking exercises
➢​ checklist thinking
➢​ greenwashing
➢​ social washing

4)​ embedded view, “economy within ecology”
→ most transformative (causes a change) worldview
→ environment is the foundation of all life (including society and economy)
ex. patagonia, doughnut economics,, planetary boundaries framework

➔​ the systems are nested in reverse than subsuming view

➔​ environment sets boundaries (planetary limits) for human and economic activity

promotion of strong sustainability: natural capital cannot be replaced by human-made capital
!! profit as a means to purpose, not the final goal

criticisms:
-​ seen as utopian or unrealistic
-​ requires deep systemic changes: governance, finance, consumption patterns


embedded view
⇒ weak sustainability: capital types are substitutable (natural capital = human-made capital)
⇒ strong sustainability: natural capital is non-substitutable
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