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Balancing The Environment And Economy

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October 24, 2017

What is the issue?

  • Low GDP growth is getting to be a serious cause of concern for the economy.
  • There are apprehensions that this would have a negative impact on the growth of employment, income and livelihood opportunities.
  • However, offering an environment perspective brings out a possible beneficious side to economic slowdown.

How are economic growth and environment related?

  • Rapid industrialisation and urbanisation are inevitable to bring in desired levels of economic development.
  • This is also believed to be essential to substantially increase the per capita income.
  • However, these income-generating activities are sure to have negative environmental consequences such as pollution.
  • Noticeably, environmental quality is being compromised for the goals of mass employment generation and poverty reduction.
  • It is believed that with gradual increase in income levels along with growth in financial and technological capabilities, environmental quality could be restored.
  • But the reality is that the continued growth generating activities only increasingly deteriorates the environmental quality.

What is the economic significance of the environment?

  • The economic significance of the environment is evident with the range of ecosystem services that it offers. These include:
  1. provisioning services (food, irrigation, drinking water).
  2. regulating services (climate regulation, water quality regulation).
  3. cultural services (recreational and religious services).
  4. supporting services (nutrient recycling, soil formation).
  • Millions of households and economic activities utilise these ecosystem services for production and consumption.
  • However, despite this high economic value, ecosystem services are not traded in the markets.
  • Their true values are thus not reflected in the economic system.

What is the case with India?

  • The above picture explains the shortfall of unrecognised economic significance of the environment.
  • In India, the current method of GDP calculation treats environmental damage costs as income(as it is compensated with the income in other sectors such as the industry).
  • This is misleading because it accounts only the environmental damage.
  • The inherent economic potential that is lost due to the environmental damage is unaccounted.
  • Evidently, various studies have estimated the huge environmental damage cost and welfare loss due to the higher level of economic growth maintained in recent years.
  • Notably, these costs and losses are equivalent to around 5-7% of the GDP in various years.
  • This picture is despite the underestimations due to non-availability of data.
  • Because, quantifying the unsystematised ecosystem services for damage assessment is a difficult task.
  • Thus the economic welfare lost due to the loss of ecosystem services will be much higher than the current estimations in India.

What is desired?

  • The low GDP growth is for sure a negative thing in many respects.
  • However, in view of sustainable development, "low growth" could also imply a more "protected environment".
  • Consequently, the economic and social benefits that a healthy environment offers is considerably higher than that of a GDP growth at the cost of the environment.
  • Thus ensuring a quality environment can actually push income growth on a more sustainable and meaningful basis.
  • Given all these, the challenge of uncertainty in determining environmentally desirable growth rate cannot be denied.
  • However, maintaining 5-6% growth rate with strict environmental regulation is supposed to be a balanced one.
  • In this line, the government can consider market-based instruments such as pollution tax and tradable pollution permits as pollution control measures.
  • Environmental accounting and green GDP for India could be other possible tools.

 

Source: The Hindu

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