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Buddhist Economics: The Foundation for an Equitable, Sustainable, Caring Economy
Author Brown, Clair (著)
Source The Yin-Cheng Journal of Contemporary Buddhism=印證佛學期刊
Volumev.1 n.1
Date2023
Pages199 - 218
PublisherCambria Press
Publisher Url https://www.cambriapress.com/
LocationNew York, US [紐約州, 美國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteAuthor Affiliation: UC Berkeley, USA.
KeywordBuddhist economics; Sustainability; Prosperity; Inequality; Neoliberal; Carbon emissions; Well-being; Government Policies
AbstractOur planet faces the extinction of much of the natural world, including humans, if carbon emissions are not dramatically reduced by 2030 in order to keep the global temperature rise under 1.5 degrees centigrade. Inequality in the United States has surged, and inequality in countries around the world has grown even as it has lessened between rich and developing countries. Yet economies continue to focus on growth of income, which has increased both greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and inequality. This paper asks: How can we create meaningful changes in our economic system to provide shared prosperity, a healthy environment, and reduced suffering? In this paper, I present a vision of Buddhist economics, which is based on known policies to create an equitable, sustainable economy with greater well-being for people in the United States and abroad, as a holistic alternative to free market (neoliberal) economics. First, I describe the Buddhist economic framework and compare it to the free market economic model. Then I discuss four observed relationships that support Buddhist economics: (1) Inequality and carbon emissions go together; (2) Inequality reduces well-being; (3) Society is subsidizing the fossil fuel industry and wasteful consumption by the rich; and (4) People are altruistic as well as self-regarding. To demonstrate how countries have policies compatible with a Buddhist economy, I present the Sustainable Shared-Prosperity Policy Index that ranks countries by their policies that support sustainability, structure markets, and provide social programs and services with the goal of creating a holistic economy that cares for people and the planet.
Table of contentsAbstract 199
Keywords 199
The Problem: An Inequitable and Unsustainable Economy 200
The Solution: The Buddhist Economics Approach 201
Buddhist Economics versus Free Market Economics: Basic Worldviews 202
Data and Evidence 203
1. Inequality and carbon emissions go together. 203
2. Inequality reduces well-being. 204
3. Society subsidizes the fossil fuel industry and the rich. 205
4. People are altruistic as well as self-regarding. 207
How to Create a Buddhist Economy 208
Conclusion 213
Bibliography 214
ISSN29965640 (P); 29965659 (E)
DOI10.15239/ycjcb.01.01.07
Hits9
Created date2024.09.30
Modified date2024.10.07



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