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INTRODUCTION
Chapter 11. Plan B: Rising to the Challenge
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
Plan B is a massive mobilization to
deflate the global economic bubble before it reaches the bursting
point. Keeping the bubble from bursting will require an unprecedented
degree of international cooperation to stabilize population, climate,
water tables, and soilsand
at wartime speed. Indeed, in both scale and urgency the effort required
is comparable to the U.S. mobilization during World War II.
Our only hope now is rapid systemic changechange
based on market signals that tell the ecological truth. This means
restructuring the tax system: lowering income taxes and raising
taxes on environmentally destructive activities, such as fossil
fuel burning, to incorporate the ecological costs. Unless we can
get the market to send signals that reflect reality, we will continue
making faulty decisions as consumers, corporate planners, and government
policymakers. Ill-informed economic decisions and the economic distortions
they create can lead to economic decline.
Plan B is the only viable option simply because Plan A, continuing
with business as usual, offers an unacceptable outcomecontinuing
environmental degradation and disruption and a bursting of the economic
bubble. The warning signals are coming more frequently, whether
they be collapsing fisheries, melting glaciers, or falling water
tables. Thus far the wake-up calls have been local, but soon they
could become global. Massive imports of grain by Chinaand
the rise in food prices that would likely followcould
awake us from our lethargy.
But time is running out. Bubble economies, which by definition are
artificially inflated, do not continue indefinitely. Our demands
on the earth exceed its regenerative capacity by a wider margin
with each passing day.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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