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Beyond Growth: The Economics of Sustainable Development Paperback – August 14, 1997

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 78 ratings

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"Daly is turning economics inside out by putting the earth and its diminishing natural resources at the center of the field . . . a kind of reverse Copernican revolution in economics." 
--Utne Reader

"Considered by most to be the dean of ecological economics, Herman E. Daly elegantly topples many shibboleths in 
Beyond Growth. Daly challenges the conventional notion that growth is always good, and he bucks environmentalist orthodoxy, arguing that the current focus on 'sustainable development' is misguided and that the phrase itself has become meaningless."
--Mother Jones

"In 
Beyond Growth, . . . [Daly] derides the concept of 'sustainable growth' as an oxymoron. . . . Calling Mr. Daly 'an unsung hero,' Robert Goodland, the World Bank's top environmental adviser, says, 'He has been a voice crying in the wilderness.'" 
--G. Pascal Zachary, 
The Wall Street Journal

"A new book by that most far-seeing and heretical of economists, Herman Daly. For 25 years now, Daly has been thinking through a new economics that accounts for the wealth of nature, the value of community and the necessity for morality."
--Donella H. Meadows, 
Los Angeles Times

"For clarity of vision and ecological wisdom Herman Daly has no peer among contemporary economists. . . . 
Beyond Growth is essential reading."
--David W. Orr, Oberlin College

"There is no more basic ethical question than the one Herman Daly is asking." 
--Hal Kahn, 
The San Jose Mercury News

"Daly's critiques of economic orthodoxy . . . deliver a powerful and much-needed jolt to conventional thinking." --Karen Pennar, 
Business Week

Named one of a hundred "visionaries who could change your life" by the Utne Reader,
Herman Daly is the recipient of many awards, including a Grawemeyer Award, the Heineken Prize for environmental science, and the "Alternative Nobel Prize," the Right Livelihood Award. He is professor at the University of Maryland's School of Public Affairs, and coauthor with John Cobb, Jr., of For the Common Good.

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4.4 out of 5 stars
78 global ratings

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Customers find the book insightful and thought-provoking. They appreciate the simple yet compelling logic and easy-to-understand concepts. The book provides an eye-opening look at the issues facing our economy and how to solve them.

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9 customers mention "Insight"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book insightful and engaging. It explains problems and offers solutions. The logic is simple yet compelling, making it rewarding to grasp. Readers appreciate the references and comparisons. They find the message of hope believable and reconcile sustainable development principles with economics.

"...human economics, and I am glad to find it is essential and rewarding to grasp his terms and reasoning. His chapter 1 on moving to a steady..." Read more

"...I love the simple, yet compelling logic of Daly's insight: take the existing neoclassical model of economics--the circular flow of income between..." Read more

"...This book speaks of sustainability. This book speaks of useful prosperity. This book speaks of ethics...." Read more

"...This book reconciles a lot of principles of sustainable development with economics...." Read more

3 customers mention "Ease of use"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book's logic simple and compelling. They appreciate the easy-to-understand concepts and the author's ease with the material.

"...I love the simple, yet compelling logic of Daly's insight: take the existing neoclassical model of economics--the circular flow of income between..." Read more

"...or economic "creds", but he seems quite assured and at ease in this material...." Read more

"...in economics (like myself), but nonetheless they are somewhat easy to grasp concepts...." Read more

3 customers mention "Look"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book insightful. They say it offers an eye-opening look at the issues facing the economy.

"...'s book was a clear intellectual architecture for a world that is beautiful, full of possibilities for interesting life work, and full of hope and..." Read more

"I read this book an the recommendation of a friend. It's an eye-opening look at why our economy isn't sustainable - and it boils down to this: what..." Read more

"Whether you agree with DALY or not, this was certainly a fresh look at some of the problems in economics which have been nagging at me for years...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2009
    Daly comments in his chapter on Georgescu-Roegen that the grandmaster of physics-based economics was his professor at Vanderbilt. I recall reading in one source about the importance of his time in Brazil for his developing insights. This book contains one chapter on Brazil, where Daly reflects on some aspects of population growth and the economy there.
    I read this book in a grad school course, having an undergraduate degree in biology, much practical activism, and some minor graduate background in some economics. I needed to outline some chapters to really grasp his discussion and terms. As Jared Diamond mentions in his book Collapse, the removal of any tree, fish, or living thing inherently disrupts ecosystems. While I have found organic foods and green products to be fundamental to creating a sounder activist lifestyle, and perhaps there is some part of me that bridles at the role of economics in subjugating ecosystems. Of course, Daly is a valiant intellect in service of aligning nature and human economics, and I am glad to find it is essential and rewarding to grasp his terms and reasoning.
    His chapter 1 on moving to a steady state economy provides two fundamental ideas, biophysical and ethicosocial limits, along with the contemporary psychosocial condition of money, indicators, and information technology. His Chapter 11 I found especially helpful in focussing on the other basic concepts of allocation, distribution, and optimal scale.
    A funny characteristic of Daly's thought strikes me as strangely comparable to conventional economists, in that it is overwhelmingly philosophical in character. While he also overwhelmingly appears to be applying a very tangible awareness of the biophysical and ethicosocial limits to his thoughts about allocation, distribution, and scale and the like, he does not cite constructive and existing examples.
    As he refers at the end of his biophysical topic, conventional economists are like high priests. I think he implicitly perceives another issue that I don't think he explicitly addresses, that of economic power. William Dugger and a few other hearty economists have braved the subject, although it is C.W. Mills who had forged through some wilderness with his work, The Power Elite. Therefore, Daly may want to remain in the highly theoretical realm to avoid imaginable tragedies of other sorts.
    Nevertheless, he does refer to Greenpeace in the introduction in an offhand reference, which touches on this important invisible, and essential, dimension. While Daly's discussion explores brilliantly various essential conceptual realms, I think three additional ones that help me grasp and stick with his enormous accomplishment are the views of Ralph Nader, Anita Roddick, and James Warbasse. I use Ralph Nader to reflect the role of non-profit activists like Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and Sierra Club. Anita Roddick represents social entrepreneurs like Pax World Fund, Tom's of Maine, and Patagonia's founder. James Warbasse advocated for the cooperative movement, represented in part by Welch's, Ocean Spray, and Land O'Lakes, but more strongly by Organic Valley, Equal Exchange, and Once Again Nut Butters.
    With these types of dynamics in mind, an invisible wall in Daly's thought becomes clear. His focus has continued to be the established system and the fundamental dynamics underlying its tragic growth. Ultimately, however, the hope for manifesting his insights lies outside the realm of his overall focus. The wisdom economy he refers to briefly exists in many places already. Daly's discussions are a fine basis to encourage and motivate those who already participate in the alternative, green economy.
    Moreover, I have found at least two points which reflect something about the limitations of Daly's own assumptions and focus, trivial as they ultimately appear to be. His review of the situation in Northeast Brazil tragically fails to acknowledge the indigenous populations. He makes an egregiously wrong statement "there is no ethnic difference between the poor and the rich." Personally, I happen to have close family in that very area, and immediately perceived the mistake. Further research clarified the situation for me. A tragic case of cultural eradication took place there, which may have spared some lives but meant total cultural subjugation.
    Secondly, he states at one point that he would let labor and capital duke it out as if on equal terms when he concludes an argument of biophysical limits. I thought that an unrealistic equation, and a moment of loss of clarity as he circled in the intellectual stratosphere. Unfortunately, for all the corporate executive and cultural prejudice against laborers, it is the anti-employee actions of cold-blooded, profit-blood thirsty executives that has overwhelmingly debased labor's conditions and underlain most of their grievances.
    On a number of occasions he seems to indulge in conventional market assumptions before mostly discerning fundamental issues. The issue of labor ultimately has been given extensive treatment in literature on employee-owned firms, beginning with Jaroslav Vanek and others in journals like Journal of Economic Issues. David Ellerman has made an important argument recently, and well-described in William Greider's The Soul of Capitalism and Mark Lutz's Economics for the Common Good. Daly is also treated in both those excellent works. Greider's addresses many practical dimensions and cases and would make excellent accompaniment to Daly's work. Michael Conroy's work, Branded!, also. He treats the non-profit certification movement with some inspiring detail.
    Ultimately, my research has been leading me to the conclusion that the empirical basis of modern economics is not their inexplicable powers of fantastic logic. It is the missing dimension captured in Daly's quote of high priests, Mills' work on The Power Elite, and Dugger's work on Corporate Hegemony. Predatory, profit-maximizing corporations have stacked the system, including legal decisions over the last 200 years in an anti-democratic counter-revolution even before Reagan. They created a limited liability culture that has created an advertising and consumer culture each in turn. Thom Hartmann, Joel Bakan, Charles Derber, and Marjorie Kelly are among some of the excellent researchers on those topics, along with Greider, Dugger, and Mills. Therefore, the strongest logical step for these brave ecological economists like Daly, and any of us there supporters, is to link the actions mentioned by Diamond, formerly of the WWF, about the need for citizen action and the successes of the WWF and Rainforest Action Network. Keeping Nader, Greenpeace, Roddick, Warbasse, and Conroy in mind, and the many civil society groups, Daly's work can find the empirical base it needs to help transform academia and green industrial society.
    8 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2007
    I've read a *lot* of economics books in recent years, some good, some not. But Daly's is really in a class by itself for seeing the big picture and explaining it clearly: traditional economics is broken. Neoclassical economics today is like high energy physics: all the trusty laws that held so true in normal energy physics, or 19th and 20th century economies, mysteriously start to fail us. I love the simple, yet compelling logic of Daly's insight: take the existing neoclassical model of economics--the circular flow of income between households and firms--and then draw a box around it, to acknowledge that the world is of finite size. Once you do that, analyze however you wish...the recognition of a finite world leads inexorably to the notion of an optimum size for the national and global economy. I like how Daly uses tools from mainstream economics to make the point: we all remember from Microeconomics that every firm has an optimal size, based on the size of the overall economy. Economics has the notion of limits to growth embedded already, we just need collectively to apply that logic without flinching.

    Something that impressed me was how Daly in 1997 used his intellectual model to forecast the concentration of asset ownership in the U.S., with the consequence of increasing class disparity and declining real wages for the middle class. That would have seemed like outlandish poppycock in the mid-90s, but now in 2007, lo and behold, it's coming to pass (per the CIA and the Economic Policy Institute, and BLS.gov statistics) for all the reasons Daly outlined 10 years ago. The man is onto something, and policymakers would do well to listen to him.

    Even better, I think, is that reading between the lines of Daly's book there is a real and believable message of hope. The world of the future that acknowledges limits, and embraces development over growth (think "quality" not "quantity" of the economy as the goal) is a better place than the world we live in today. Instead of the world becoming a planetary Los Angeles or Hong Kong, where life is crowded, expensive, polluted and mean, what I took away from Daly's book was a clear intellectual architecture for a world that is beautiful, full of possibilities for interesting life work, and full of hope and things to look forward to. I sincerely hope that Daly's vision helps shape the world my daughter grows up in.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2016
    very usefull, but it doesn't answer more recent questions, for instance about poverty and global worming.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2017
    This is a great book. It first illustrates how our current lifestyle is preying on the earth' s ecosystem. It then clearly shows how the ecological degradation is exacerbated by the globally applied policy of maximizing economic growth.

    Daly argues, very convincingly in my view, that sustainable development can only be achieved if the objective of economic growth is replaced by a new paradigm. This requires an overhaul of the neoclassical economic model: not only should the model involve allocation and distribution but also the scale of the human economy with respect to the carrying capacity of a finite planet.

    As much as an economic analysis, this book is a rallying cry for action. Reading it now, in 2017, I find it even more frustrating and astonishing that so little progress has been made in 20 years. "Economic growth" is still the tune whistled by the IMF and the World Bank, seconded by numerous national governments.

    Some positive signs now are that the energy transition towards renewable energies appears to have taken off. And in some circles, there is talk about a "circular economy". The term is often used by people who don't really understand the Second Law of Thermodynamics and therefore don't see how difficult it would be for humanity to achieve it, but hey, it's a starting point. Still there is so much to do, we'd better get going.

    In summary, important stuff. Highly recommended.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Manishi
    5.0 out of 5 stars Nice book arguing against the hegemony of GDP
    Reviewed in Germany on October 30, 2023
    Good proposed solutions for sustainable development in terms of policies and mindset. Good arguments against mainstream economics theory that focus on growth alone
  • Francisco
    5.0 out of 5 stars De obligada lectura en los tiempos que corren
    Reviewed in Spain on June 23, 2023
    Excelente análisis del despropósito que supone no tener en cuenta la capacidad de carga del planeta y sus límites en la teoría económica ortodoxa.
  • MagnetMagnate
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing. It is a bit old now
    Reviewed in Canada on January 14, 2018
    Amazing. It is a bit old now, but the concepts are profound. It has some points that resonated with me and some that challenged my ideas of sustainability for which I appreciate.
  • Andrew Francis
    5.0 out of 5 stars Another great Herman Daly book
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 25, 2015
    Daly is a former World Bank senior adviser on international economic policy. He writes well, cogently and accessibly. His anecdotal style makes this a comfortable, but not comforting, and really challenging book. Read it, change your world view then downsize your consumption and lifestyle. Enjoy
  • "thechetbaker"
    5.0 out of 5 stars The best book I read last year
    Reviewed in Japan on February 19, 2005
    This is a focused critique of the growth-driven economic paradigm that we live in and that is incompatible with the finite natural world, and an introduction to a non-growth based (but still VIBRANT) economic paradigm that could be sustainable.
    Daly follows his argument with excellent case studies that illustrate how national policy can help us move toward this new paradigm.
    I am not an economist and some of this book was challenging for me, but it put into words many ideas that had been floating around my mind unfocused for so long because I just couldn't articulate them as Daly did.
    I am really glad I read this book. So will anyone with an interest in a sustainable economic future.