Herman Daly

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Herman Daly (born 1938) is an American ecological economist and professor at the School of Public Policy of University of Maryland, College Park in the United States.

He was Senior Economist in the Environment Department of the World Bank, where he helped to develop policy guidelines related to sustainable development. While there, he was engaged in environmental operations work in Latin America.

Before joining the World Bank, Daly was Alumni Professor of Economics at Louisiana State University. He is a co-founder and associate editor of the journal, Ecological Economics.

He is also a recipient of an Honorary Right Livelihood Award (the alternative Nobel Prize), the Heineken Prize for Environmental Science from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Sophie Prize (Norway) and the Leontief Prize from the Global Development and Environment Institute.

He is widely credited with having originated the idea of uneconomic growth, though some credit this to Marilyn Waring who developed it more completely in her study of the UN System of National Accounts.

Contents

[edit] Quotes

“If you’ve eaten poison, you must get rid of the substances that are making you ill. Let us then, apply the stomach pump to the doctrines of economic growth that we have been force-fed for decades.” [1]

“We cannot have too many people alive simultaneously lest we destroy carrying capacity and thereby reduce the number of lives possible in all subsequent time periods.”[citation needed]

“Environmental degradation is an iatrogenic disease induced by the economic physicians (pro-growth advocates) who attempt to treat the sickness with unlimited wants by prescribing unlimited production. We do not cure a treatment-induced disease by increasing the treatment dosage.”[citation needed]

“Current economic growth has uncoupled itself from the world and has become irrelevant. Worse, it has become a blind guide.”[citation needed]

[edit] Publications

Daly's interest in economic development, population, resources, ecological economics, and the environment has resulted in over a hundred articles as well as numerous books, including:

  • 1977, Steady-State Economics
  • 1989, For the Common Good, with theologian John B. Cobb, Jr.: This received the Grawemeyer Award for ideas for improving World Order.
  • 1993, Valuing the Earth
  • 1996, Beyond Growth
  • 1999, Ecological Economics and the Ecology of Economics
  • 2003, Ecological Economics: Principles and Applications, with Joshua Farley: an economics textbook.

[edit] References

  1. ^ [http://www.thesocialcontract.com/pdf/thirteen-three/xiii-3-185.pdf Selected Growth Fallacies]. Retrieved on 2008-03-31.

[edit] External links