Unit-4 Issues and Challenges PDF
Unit-4 Issues and Challenges PDF
Structure
4.1
Introduction
Objectives
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
4.6
4.1
INTRODUCTION
4.2
You will agree that the major problem faced by the world today is still the intractable
problem of poverty and hunger. Achieving food security requires more than just
production of food. Overall perspectives of economic development are being
increasingly seen as a better promoter of food security than food production alone.
But this cannot be achieved without firm knowledge. Action upon land and water is an
unavoidable part of any economic policy. Thus economic development and food
security require knowledge-based firm action upon land and water and indeed on all
natural resources. Accordingly Natural Resource Management (NRM) is one of the
biggest issues in sustainable development. For example, phenomena like land
degradation, desertification, loss of wetlands and deforestation are the real constraints
to the future sustainability of good agriculture everywhere in the world.
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Introduction to Sustainable
Development
However, as we enter the 21st century, we have begun to face a new sustainability
challenge in business and trade, namely, the growth of Trans National Corporations
(TNCs), which have taken control of resource policies in the world. These TNCs have
changed the contours of the welfare state and Keynesian economics. Since the TNCs
bring Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), the poor countries are making extensive
regulatory changes in their economic resources and policies to make themselves
appear as attractive investment areas for FDI. Policies that might ensure sustainable
use of resources are being changed for better business and FDI. This large company
and TNC based development has been so rapid that by mid 1990s we were faced with
an alarming and stupefying statistics. In 1995 the United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development (UNCTAD) study found that 40,000 corporations, in all, controlled
two-thirds of the total world trade in goods and services. According to a report:
Of the worlds largest economies, 51 are corporations. Only 49 are countries. The
budget of Mitsubishi Corporation is larger than that of Indonesia, the worlds
fourth most populous country and a land of enormous natural wealth.
The combined sales of the worlds top 200 corporations are equal to 28 percent of
the worlds Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
These same 200 corporations employ only 18.8 million people, less than one third
of 1 percent of the worlds people and the downsizing continues.
In 1995 the total value of mergers and acquisitions for the world exceeded the
preceding year by 25 percent.
Combined
sales
are 28% of
world
GDP
Have
budgets
larger than
countries
Employ less
than 0.33 %
of workforce
MNCs
Control
two-thirds of
world trade
Consume
major
share of
resources
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In parallel to the better business & FDI narrow view, since the Earth Summit,
sustainable development has been faced with many contentious issues, which are
being debated and are still to be resolved. You may like to know about them. We
describe them now.
While the rich nations consume the largest share of resources the poor countries
bear the cost of this consumption in the form of pollution, chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs), deforestation, global warming and loss of fisheries, wilderness and
animal resources.
It has been debated between the rich and the poor nations that forests of the third
world countries are sinks for the pollution mostly generated by the developed
countries. Thus while the developed countries are trying to restrict the exploitation
of forests by the poor countries they are not at the same time willing to restrict
their own production and consumption systems to meet the demands of
sustainable economic growth.
The following five themes became the centre of concern at the Tenth Session of the
United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD10) in May 2002, and
the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in August 2002:
These themes set up certain priorities for the developed and the developing countries
and all future collaboration between the countries would largely depend upon their
willingness to explicitly incorporate these priorities in their national policy agenda and
actions taken towards them. The following main themes focus upon the agenda of
governance for sustainable development:
Introduction to Sustainable
Development
development can play a major role in achieving sustainable development and poverty
eradication.
There are serious challenges to economic growth in present times, which may be
described under following points:
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1.
From quantity to quality: The quantitative aspect of growth had settled upon
the simplistic tendency of cost-benefit analysis about the worth of a productive
process. However the intangibles in nature are difficult to quantify. Thus new
forms of accounting techniques are being developed to quantify the value of flora
and fauna in nature so that the material and monetary scarcity can be assessed in
real terms. Incentives other than money have been found to be more welcome by
communities in a large number of cases.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
You may like to stop for a while and concretise the arguments presented so far.
SAQ 1
Outline the major issues in relation to sustainable economic growth that confront the
developing countries today.
4.3
About 900 million people in the world live in absolute poverty. Their livelihoods
essentially depend upon the production of natural resources and natural products.
People from the least developed countries are the most vulnerable to trade offs in their
natural produce. Their livelihood depends upon the export earnings from their primary
products such as agricultural and forest products, mineral, fish etc. consumed by
others. For increasing consumerism demands rapid exploitation and over exploitation
causes depletion of resources. Yet any commodity crash in the international market
worsens the terms of trade for them.
At present 80 percent of poor in Latin America, 50 percent poor in Asia and 50
percent poor in Africa live on marginal lands, which are already highly susceptible to
environmental degradation. Desertification and various forms of land degradation
affected the livelihoods of more than 135 million people in 1984, which had increased
from the 77 million in 1977. This increasing pressure on land and other natural
resources prevents sustainable livelihoods of people in both the poor and the
developed countries also like the United States and Japan.
The attainment of sustainable livelihoods is related to the sustainable economy of
nations. A highly indebted country, w hich is suddenly made to repay debt, speeds up
production of primary commodities pushing the prices further down. Between 1980
and 1999, the weighted index for a group of 33 primary products declined by half
from 105 to 57 and the export commodity prices of the Third World fell by 20
percent. Uganda alone suffered a loss of 122 million on exports from just two primary
commodities tea and coffee. In Tanzania poor people derive half of their cash incomes
from the sale of forest products such as charcoal, honey, firewood and wild fruits. The
same is true of other poor countries including the transitional countries like India,
Brazil etc.
Fig.4.2: Attaining sustainable livelihoods is a major concern of poor people all over the world.
(Source: www.iucn.org/.../ images/imagebody2.jpg)
Introduction to Sustainable
Development
also very small so that the country is regarded as very sustainable. On the other hand,
Indonesia, with large stocks of natural capital, depletes its stocks by a large amount
(due to exports), so that the country is regarded as marginally non-sustainable.
Sustainability within each country implies that the countries should reinvest natural
resources in proportion to their resource consumption.
Sustainable livelihood is a mode of protecting and improving the management of the
natural and physical environment. The 1997 White Paper on International
Development commits Department for International Development (DFID) to
promoting sustainable livelihoods. The White Paper defines sustainable livelihood
as A livelihood comprises the capabilities, assets (including both material and social
resources) and activities required for a means of living. A livelihood is sustainable
when it can cope with and recover from stresses and shocks and maintain or enhance
its capabilities and assets both now and in the future, while not undermining the
natural resource capital asset.
Transnational business shifts operations from a high cost production area to a low cost
production area and introduces production systems that have no linkages with the
local communities and their resource use methods and styles of livelihoods. These
communities are alienated from their own land and assets. International agreements
reduce possibilities of asserting their claims and access to resources. The framework
currently in use classifies five types of capital assets from which the individual draws
his/her livelihood:
1.
Natural: The natural resource stocks from which resource flows useful for
livelihoods are derived (e.g. land, water, wildlife, biodiversity, environmental
resources).
2.
Human
Social
Natural
Livelihood
Capital
Assets
Physical
Financial
Fig.4.3: Capital assets for sustainable livelihoods
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3.
Human: The skills, knowledge, ability to work and good health important to the
ability to pursue different livelihood strategies.
4.
5.
The selection of these capital assets is a subjective exercise but it provides a good
starting point to assess as to how and in what combinations assets actually translate
into sustainable livelihoods. Livelihoods are ideally sustainable when all stakeholders
are empowered and have enhanced access to assets. This calls for a change in the
status quo and by implication a shift in the power relations towards equality. To
achieve this, therefore, attention to the constitutive side of politics, i.e., governance is
required. The key governance issue to change the rules and underlying power
structures towards a positive sustainable livelihood outcome may be summarised as:
People centred
Responsive and participatory
Multi level
Partnership
Sustainable
Dynamic
Introduction to Sustainable
Development
behalf of others. Groups engaged in livelihoods often do not have the resources and
political influence to represent their interests in national and international fora. It is
more realistic to explore ways in which such groups, for example, of farmers and
others, can feed their concerns into regional and national decision-making in such a
way that the concerns can then go on to be represented at the international level.
Flexible/adaptable: Institutions for sustainable livelihood are opposed to the top
down or trickle down approaches. They are flexible enough to accommodate changing
political and ecological circumstances - making sure that the adoption of procedures
are not bogged down by inertia, routine or agency capture. This is particularly
important where institutions have to react and respond quickly to changing resource
needs. Flexibility provides security, creativity and drive for innovation.
Enforceable: Policies that propose solutions to particular problems have to be
sensitive to the problems of enforcement and implementation, often in very adverse
conditions. Policies that fail to be implemented undermine trust and respect in an
institution which is critical to its overall success. Enforcement procedures need to be
clear and realistic and reporting mechanisms need to be transparent in order to
demonstrate effectively whether policy commitments have been met.
SAQ 2
What do you understand by sustainable livelihoods? How can a nation achieve this
target?
4.4
The Stockholm Declaration of 1972 suggested that Man is both creature and
moulder of his environment, which gives him physical sustenance and affords him the
opportunity for intellectual, moral, social and spiritual growth. In the long and
tortuous evolution of the human race on this planet a stage has been reached when
through the rapid acceleration of science and technology, man has acquired the
power to transform his environment in countless ways and on an unprecedented scale.
Both aspects of mans environment, the natural and the man made, are essential to his
well being and to the enjoyment of basic human right- even the right to life itself.
Thirty years after the Stockholm Conference, it is still not possible to describe the
state of world environment comprehensively or to say with confidence that national
governments have the will or the knowledge to harmonise development policies with
sound environmental policies. Problems and challenges in this context are:
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Take for example Japan, which attempted to correct its Gross National Product
(GNP) for many factors including, environmental. It was found that instead of the
GNP growing by a factor of 8.3 percent per year between 1955 and 1985; it grew
by an average of only 5.8 percent per year. Similarly if the physical depletion and
petroleum price increase, forest, soil and water assets are taken into consideration
most of the developed and developing countries face a sharp drop in their GNP
ratings. However accounting for the loss of stock resources is complex and
remains a contested debate in international politics. The task of adjusting national
accounts becomes a political task when no national government likes to reveal the
drop in its GNP rise.
Problem of fixing responsibilities and making them pay: The global balance of
environmental use suggests a redistribution of monetary resources to the poor
countries to improve their human capital by investing in health, education and
nutrition. This presently is a major battle in the economic and the environmental
forums. It demands a change in the life styles of the rich nations and a reduction
in their consumption patterns. Because the environment has been treated as a free
resource, the rich nations have taken advantage of this to emit most of the worlds
pollution.
It has been suggested that the environment be correctly priced and tradable
permits were issued to all nations (50% on the basis of GDP and 50% on the
basis of population). If this was done, then it has been estimated that the rich
nations might have to transfer as much as 5% of their combined GDP to the poor
nations to buy environment permits from them. The Human Development
Report suggests that the developing countries are a home to the worlds tropical
forests and it is in everyones interest to preserve them to counter global warming
and preserve biodiversity. Similarly protection of the ozone layer demands global
restraint in the production of CFCs.
The industrial countries have been responsible for most of its production and the
issue of transfer of this polluting technology to the developing countries should
be prevented. This would be possible only if the poor countries are duly
compensated and helped in investing into alternative technology. A corollary to
this principle is that countries which pollute atmosphere should be charged for
such irresponsibility or revoking the polluter pays principle. This could be the
basis for an international market for tradable permits for various forms of
pollution. This should be treated as a payment for services by the rich nations and
not as an aid to the poor countries.
Introduction to Sustainable
Development
rules. How equitable or rational are the basic assumptions upon which the
international system currently distributes resources?
It is not only a question of protecting the resources directly being affected but
also regulating the international investment system, for example, through FDI
made by the trans national companies, in the natural resources sector such as
minin g, fishing and timber logging etc.
In the past decade at least two important cases have been decided by the
International Court of Justice in favour of India and Pakistan who were the
petitioners against the United States of America (USA) for the protection of their
coastal fisheries. The negotiations on the signing of the Climate Change
Convention or Kyoto Protocol and the Biodiversity Convention expose the myth
of interdependence and reveal the use of the dominance theory by the USA and
other developed nations.
The ever growing population: Paul Ehrlich in his book The Population Bomb
(1969) had given a threatening description of the population growth which was
reminiscent of Thomas Malthuss prediction in the late 18th century that the
growth in human numbers would outstrip the growth in food supply and this
would lead to poverty and hunger. The conventional school, which is mainly
Western in origin, treats population growth as the main contributor to
environmental degradation but another school mainly emerging out of India treats
the growth of population as irrelevant to this debate.
The Centre for Science and Environment in its Second Citizens Report (1982)
has claimed that it is the callous mismanagement of countrys natural resources
that is responsible for hunger and poverty in India. The Human Development
Report of 1995 has shown that developmental policy of increasing education and
employment of women has brought a sharp fall in the population growth of some
South East Asian countries. Therefore population growth is a consequence of
imbalanced and non-sustainable development rather than its cause.
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2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
1
Maximise the output and
rate of growth
Solve or avoid
environmental problems
APPROPRIATE
TECHNOLOGY
SHOULD
Improve quality of life
Reduce unemployment;
Contribute to development
4
Promote equity in income
distribution
4.5
SUMMARY
Problems of sustainable development are rooted in the issues of resource use and
their pattern of distribution and ownership. Thus a policy towards sustainable
development cannot be framed in isolation to politics and state regulations. The
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Introduction to Sustainable
Development
In the 1970s the debate on development was safely polarised between the issue of
environment and development. This decade saw a major revision in the thought of
development itself and that has presented a major challenge to the conventional
consensus on economic development. New expressions such as sustainable
development have added new dimension to development debates.
The problem today is not primarily one of absolute physical shortage but of
economic and social maldistribution and misuse. Thus the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) 1975 explains environmental management
implies sustainable development. Since then the challenge as expressed in the
Brundtland Report, is that the process of economic development (which) must be
more soundly based on the stock of capital that sustains it.
Economic growth cannot be translated into economic well being till distribution
of costs and benefits of both financial and natural resources in economic policies
is accounted for. It has been found that the costs of development are generally
borne by the poor and subsistence community but the benefits are always falling
into the pockets of the rich. This is also translated into international relations
where the poor countries over-extract their resources to meet the requirements of
the international market under the pressure of debt and amortisation payments
leaving them with no choice but to abuse their environmental resources in an
unsustainable manner.
4.6
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TERMINAL QUESTIONS
1.
2.
3.
4.
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