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Summary: Basic Principles of Sustainable and Responsible Economy and Business (B-KUL-YF0044)

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Summary Basic Principles of Sustainable and Responsible Economy and Business, all sessions (12) and slides with graphs, definitions, explanations,...

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Subido en
29 de diciembre de 2025
Número de páginas
48
Escrito en
2025/2026
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Summary Basic Principles of Sustainable and Resp.
Business and Economics
Introduction
ERS = Ethics, Responsibility and Sustainability
- Ethics = multidisciplinary field with foundations in moral philosophy,
behavioural psychology, organizational theory and business and economics
- Responsibility = management of the integration and/or balancing of
economic, ecological and social policies
- Sustainability = future orientations regarding complex social,
environmental and economic challenges

Brundtland’s definition of sustainable development (SD)

“Sustainable development is development that meets the
needs of the present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs. It contains within
it two key concepts:
- the concept of 'needs', in particular the essential needs of the
world's poor, to which overriding priority should be given; and
- the idea of limitations imposed by the state of technology
and social organization on the environment's ability to meet
present and future needs.”


Definition is also about:
- Equity, definition contains 2 dimensions of equity/fairness:
 Within current generation, between rich and poor
= INTRA generational equity
 Between generations, between current and future people
= INTER generational equity
 Development cannot be called sustainable if these principles are
violated
- Needs, more than only food, shelter, money, income, …
 Physiological needs
 Safety needs
 Social needs
 Esteem needs
 Self-actualization needs
- Ability, linked to the state of environment, technology and social
institutions that the current generation leaves behind for future
generations
 Links SD to the notion of non-declining capital stocks*:
= Physical capital, Human Capital, Institutional Capital, Natural capital

* non-declining capital stocks means that the total wealth or productive capacity of society should
not decrease over time, so that future generations can enjoy at least the same opportunities for
well-being as the present generation

,Trade-offs:
- Equity: trade-off between needs of current and future generations
 Non renewable vs renewable resources

Beyond Brundtland

- 3Ps




- 5Ps




Four ERS competency areas:

1) ERS worldview
 The ERS worldview provides a comprehensive, science-based understanding of
the planet and how humans, economies, and organizations interact with it. It
examines major sustainability challenges, questions different worldviews and
their assumptions, and explores the underlying values that shape them.

2) Complexity in ERS
 Grand challenges are seen as wicked problems because they arise from the
complexity and interconnection of natural, social, technological, political, and
economic systems. Understanding them involves recognizing system
interconnections, feedbacks, and tipping points, addressing tensions like short-
term vs. long-term goals, and moving beyond simple dualistic thinking.

3) Future orientation for ERS
 Futures literacy helps people imagine alternative futures, use creative and
transdisciplinary thinking, and inspire societal transformation through
imagination and foresight

4) Acting for ERS
 how individuals and organizations address societal challenges and promote
sustainability through new governance, leadership, and collaboration, while
reflecting on the values, tensions, and contradictions involved.

,ERS World view
Session 2: Views on ERS and their assumptions

Disparate view:
Disparate = ‘totaal onafhankelijk’
- Main thesis
 Social and environmental systems are separate
 Companies should not engage in non-economic systems
- Assumptions
 Beneficiary: Economy
 Hierarchy: Non-related systems + economic system as the largest
 Market regulation: The invisible hand of the market
- Business model
 Profit maximalization or “The only business of business is business”
- Implications for sustainability
 Goal: Social responsibility of business is to make profit
 Focus: Social and ecological costs are seen as externalities
 Assessment: Financial performance
- If attention to sustainability, it is along
 Legal compliance
 Personal initiatives: philanthropy, volunteering, ...
- Criticism
 Negative consequences for social and environmental systems (negative
externalities)
 Social and environmental needs are not addressed

Subsuming view:
Strategic vision on sustainability
- Main thesis
 Social and environmental systems contribute to economic systems
 Companies should engage in environmental and/or social systems
to the extent that it increases economic performance.
- Assumption
 Nested hierarchy, pursuing economic benefits of social and
environmental issues
- Example business model
 Shared value model - “recognizes that societal needs, not just conventional
economic needs, define markets”

- Implications for sustainability
 Goal: mutual reinforcement between business growth and social/environmental
progress
 Focus: social and environmental needs are seen as drivers of innovation,
competitiveness, and growth
 Assessment: economic valuation of social and environmental resources
==> strategic integration
- Criticism
 Profit maximalisation remains major goal
 Instrumental approach: social and environmental needs are only addressed for market
opportunities

, Intertwined view:
The 3 are equal, all dependent on each other
- Main thesis
 Each system is equally valid; companies should balance their considerations
for each.
- Assumption
 No hierarchy - Win-win-win approach
- Business Model
 3-P (profit, people, planet) model

- Implications for sustainability
 Goal: Long term harmony between economy, society, and environment
 Focus: Companies must weigh and report on all three dimensions equally
 Assessment: non-financial reporting + financial performance
==> balance of three pillars
- Criticism
 Balancing trade-offs is challenging – profit may still dominate
 Measurement difficulties of social and environmental dimensions
 Reporting checklist rather than rethinking the system (risk of greenwashing
and social washing)

Embedded view:
- Main thesis
 Economic system is embedded in social system, which is
embedded in environmental system; economic activity as a
means to achieve social and environmental wellbeing
- Assumption
 A new hierarchy that gives dominance to the environmental
system which hosts the social system which hosts the economic
one
- Example of business model
 Regenerative model - "We're in business to save our home
planet,"
 Economic model: Doughnut economics
- Implications for sustainability
 Strong sustainability
 Think differently about 'economic performance'
 Profit as a means to prosperity, purpose...
 Think differently about 'win-idea'
 From one party wins, to win-win-win, … to abandon the whole
idea of 'who wins'
- Criticism:
 Niche model

 Weak Sustainability
= Interchangeability of natural capital and human-made capital
 Strong Sustainability
= An essential physical subset of natural capital must be preserved, this
cannot be substituted
*(9 Planetary boundaries see slides)
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