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Overconsumption (economics)

Overconsumption describes a situation where a consumer overuses their available goods and services to where they can't, or don't want to, replenish or reuse them. In microeconomics, this may be described as the point where the marginal cost of a consumer is greater than their marginal utility. The term overconsumption is quite controversial in use and does not necessarily have a single unifying definition.[1] When used to refer to natural resources to the point where the environment is negatively affected, it is synonymous with the term overexploitation. However, when used in the broader economic sense, overconsumption can refer to all types of goods and services, including manmade ones, e.g. "the overconsumption of alcohol can lead to alcohol poisoning".[2][3] Overconsumption is driven by several factors of the current global economy, including forces like consumerism, planned obsolescence, economic materialism, and other unsustainable business models and can be contrasted with sustainable consumption.

Defining the amount of a natural resource required to be consumed for it to count as "overconsumption" is challenging because defining a sustainable capacity of the system requires accounting for many variables. The total capacity of a system occurs at both the regional and worldwide levels, which means that certain regions may have higher consumption levels of certain resources than others due to greater resources without overconsuming a resource. A long-term pattern of overconsumption in any given region or ecological system can cause a reduction in natural resources that often results in environmental degradation. However, this is only when applying the word to human impacts on the environment. When used in an economic sense, this point is defined as when the marginal cost of a consumer is equal to their marginal utility. Gossen's law of diminishing utility states that at this point, the consumer realizes the cost of consuming/purchasing another item/good is not worth the amount of utility (also known as happiness or satisfaction from the good) they'd receive, and therefore is not conducive to the consumer's wellbeing.[4]

When used in the environmental sense, the discussion of overconsumption often parallels that of population size and growth, and human development: more people demanding higher qualities of living, currently requires greater extraction of resources, which causes subsequent environmental degradation such as climate change and biodiversity loss.[5][6][7][8] Currently, the inhabitants of high wealth, "developed" nations consume resources at a rate almost 32 times greater than those of the developing world, who make up the majority of the human population (7.9 billion people).[9] However, the developing world is a growing consumer market. These nations are quickly gaining more purchasing power and it is expected that the Global South, which includes cities in Asia, America, and Africa, will account for 56% of consumption growth by 2030.[10] This means that if current trends continue relative consumption rates will shift more into these developing countries, whereas developed countries would start to plateau. Sustainable Development Goal 12 "responsible consumption and production" is the main international policy tool with goals to abate the impact of overconsumption.

Causes edit

Economic growth edit

If everyone consumed resources at the US level, you will need another four or five Earths.

Paul R. Ehrlich, biologist[11]

Economic growth is sometimes seen as a driver for overconsumption. Economic growth can be seen as a catalyst of overconsumption due to it requiring greater resource input to sustain the growth. China is an example where this phenomenon has been observed readily. China’s GDP increased massively from 1978, and energy consumption has increased by 6-fold.[12] By 1983, China’s consumption surpassed the biocapacity of their natural resources, leading to overconsumption.[13] In the last 30–40 years, China has seen significant increases in its pollution, land degradation, and non-renewable resource depletion, which aligns with its considerable economic growth.[14] It is unknown if other rapidly developing nations will see similar trends in resource overconsumption.

The Worldwatch Institute said China and India, with their booming economies, along with the United States, are the three planetary forces that are shaping the global biosphere.[15] The State of the World 2005 report said the two countries' high economic growth exposed the reality of severe pollution. The report states that

The world's ecological capacity is simply insufficient to satisfy the ambitions of China, India, Japan, Europe, and the United States as well as the aspirations of the rest of the world in a sustainable way.

In 2019, a warning on the climate crisis signed by 11,000 scientists from over 150 nations said economic growth is the driving force behind the "excessive extraction of materials and overexploitation of ecosystems" and that this "must be quickly curtailed to maintain long-term sustainability of the biosphere."[16][17] Also in 2019, the Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services published by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, which found that up to one million species of plants and animals are at risk of extinction from human activity,[18] asserted that

A key element of more sustainable future policies is the evolution of global financial and economic systems to build a global sustainable economy, steering away from the current limited paradigm of economic growth.[19]

Consumerism edit

Consumerism is a social and economic order that encourages the acquisition of goods and services in ever-increasing amounts. There is a spectrum of goods and services that the world population constantly consumes. These range from food and beverage, clothing and footwear, housing, energy, technology, transportation, education, health and personal care, financial services, and other utilities. When the resources required to produce these goods and services are depleted beyond a reasonable level, it can be considered to be overconsumption. Because developing nations are rising quickly into the consumer class, the trends happening in these nations are of special interest. According to the World Bank, the highest shares of consumption, regardless of income lie in food, beverage, clothing, and footwear.[20] As of 2015, the top five consumer markets in the world were the United States, Japan, Germany, China, and France.[21]

Planned and perceived obsolescence is an important factor that explains why some overconsumption of consumer products exists.[22] This factor of the production revolves around designing products with the intent to be discarded after a short period of time. Perceived obsolescence is prevalent within the fashion and technology industries. Through this technique, products are made obsolete and replaced on a semi-regular basis. Frequent new launches of technology or fashion lines can be seen as a form of marketing-induced perceived obsolescence. Products designed to break after a certain period of time or use would be considered to be planned obsolescence.[23]

Affluence edit

According to a 2020 paper written by a team of scientists titled "Scientists' warning on affluence", the entrenchment of "capitalist, growth-driven economic systems" since World War II gave rise to increasing affluence along with "enormous increases in inequality, financial instability, resource consumption and environmental pressures on vital earth support systems." And the world's wealthiest citizens, referred to as "super-affluent consumers . . . which overlap with powerful fractions of the capitalist class," are the most responsible for environmental impacts through their consumption patterns worldwide.

Any sustainable social and environmental pathways must include transcending paradigms fixated on economic growth and also reducing, not simply "greening", the overconsumption of the super-affluent, the authors contend, and propose adopting either reformist policies which can be implemented within a capitalist framework such as wealth redistribution through taxation (in particular eco-taxes), green investments, basic income guarantees and reduced work hours to accomplish this, or looking to more radical approaches associated with degrowth, eco-socialism and eco-anarchism, which would "entail a shift beyond capitalism and/or current centralised states."[24][25]

Effects edit

 
Waste generation, measured in kilograms per person per day

A fundamental effect of overconsumption is a reduction in the planet's carrying capacity. Excessive unsustainable consumption will exceed the long-term carrying capacity of its environment (ecological overshoot) and subsequent resource depletion, environmental degradation and reduced ecosystem health. In 2020 multinational team of scientists published a study, saying that overconsumption is the biggest threat to sustainability. According to the study, a drastic lifestyle change is necessary for solving the ecological crisis. According to one of the authors Julia Steinberger: “To protect ourselves from the worsening climate crisis, we must reduce inequality and challenge the notion that riches, and those who possess them, are inherently good.” The research was published on the site of the World Economic Forum. The leader of the forum professor Klaus Schwab, calls to a "great reset of capitalism".[26]

A 2020 study published in Scientific Reports, in which both population growth and deforestation were used as proxies for total resource consumption, warns that if consumption continues at the current rate for the next several decades, it can trigger a full or almost full extinction of humanity. The study says that "while violent events, such as global war or natural catastrophic events, are of immediate concern to everyone, a relatively slow consumption of the planetary resources may be not perceived as strongly as a mortal danger for the human civilization." To avoid it humanity should pass from a civilization dominated by the economy to a "cultural society" that "privileges the interest of the ecosystem above the individual interest of its components, but eventually in accordance with the overall communal interest."[27][28]

 
The worldwide prevalence of obesity in males (2008)–the darker areas represent a higher percentage of obese males.

The scale of modern life's overconsumption can lead to a decline in economy and an increase in financial instability.[29] Some argue that overconsumption enables the existence of an "overclass", while others disagree with the role of overconsumption in class inequality.[30] Population, Development, and Poverty all coincide with overconsumption; how they interplay with each other is complex.[31] Because of this complexity it is difficult to determine the role of consumption in terms of economic inequality.

 
Great Pacific garbage patch

In the long term, these effects can lead to increased conflict over dwindling resources[32] and in the worst case a Malthusian catastrophe. Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute, has said: "It would take 1.5 Earths to sustain our present level of consumption. Environmentally, the world is in an overshoot mode."[33]

As of 2012, the United States alone was using 30% of the world's resources and if everyone were to consume at that rate, we would need 3-5 planets to sustain this type of living. Resources are quickly becoming depleted, with about ⅓ already gone. With new consumer markets rising in the developing countries which account for a much higher percentage of the world's population, this number can only rise.[34] According to Sierra Club’s Dave Tilford, "With less than 5 percent of world population, the U.S. uses one-third of the world’s paper, a quarter of the world’s oil, 23 percent of the coal, 27 percent of the aluminum, and 19 percent of the copper."[35] According to BBC, a World Bank study has found that "Americans produce 16.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide per capita every year. By comparison, only 0.1 tonnes of the greenhouse gas is generated in Ethiopia per inhabitant."[36]

A 2021 study published in Frontiers in Conservation Science posits that aggregate consumption growth will continue into the near future and perhaps beyond, largely due to increasing affluence and population growth. The authors argue that "there is no way—ethically or otherwise (barring extreme and unprecedented increases in human mortality)—to avoid rising human numbers and the accompanying overconsumption", although they do say that the negative impacts of overconsumption can perhaps be diminished by implementing human rights policies to lower fertility rates and decelerate current consumption patterns.[37]

Effects on health edit

A report from the Lancet Commission says the same. The experts write: "Until now, undernutrition and obesity have been seen as polar opposites of either too few or too many calories," "In reality, they are both driven by the same unhealthy, inequitable food systems, underpinned by the same political economy that is single-focused on economic growth, and ignores the negative health and equity outcomes. Climate change has the same story of profits and power,".[38] Obesity was a medical problem for people who overconsumed food and worked too little already in ancient Rome, and its impact slowly grew through history.[39] As to 2012, mortality from obesity was 3 times larger than from hunger,[40] reaching 2.8 million people per year by 2017[41]

Overuse of artificial energy, for example, in cars, hurts health and the planet. Promoting active living and reducing sedentary lifestyle, for example, by cycling, reduces greenhouse gas emissions and improve health[42][43]

Global estimates edit

In 2010, the International Resource Panel published the first global scientific assessment on the impacts of consumption and production.[44] The study found that the most critical impacts are related to ecosystem health, human health and resource depletion. From a production perspective, it found that fossil-fuel combustion processes, agriculture and fisheries have the most important impacts. Meanwhile, from a final consumption perspective, it found that household consumption related to mobility, shelter, food, and energy-using products causes the majority of life-cycle impacts of consumption.

According to the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report, human consumption, with current policy, by the year 2100 will be seven times bigger than in the year 2010.[45]

Footprint edit

The planet can’t support billions of meat-eaters.

David Attenborough, natural historian[46]

The idea of overconsumption is also strongly tied to the idea of an ecological footprint. The term "ecological footprint" refers to the "resource accounting framework for measuring human demand on the biosphere." Currently, China, for instance, has a per person ecological footprint roughly half the size of the US, yet has a population that is more than four times the size of the US. It is estimated that if China developed to the level of the United States that world consumption rates would roughly double.[47]

Humans, their prevailing growth of demands for livestock and other domestic animals, has added overshoot through domestic animal breeding, keeping, and consumption, especially with the environmentally destructive industrial livestock production.[citation needed]Globalization and modernization have brought Western consumer cultures to countries like China and India, including meat-intensive diets which are supplanting traditional plant-based diets. Between 166 to more than 200 billion land and aquatic animals are consumed by a global population of over 7 billion annually.[48][49] A 2018 study published in Science postulates that meat consumption is set to increase as the result of human population growth and rising affluence, which will increase greenhouse gas emissions and further reduce biodiversity.[50][51] Meat consumption needs to be reduced in order to make agriculture sustainable by up to 90% according to a 2018 study published in Nature.[52]

56% of respondents to a 2022 climate survey support a carbon budget system to limit the most climate-damaging consumption (62% of those under 30).[53]

Biomass of mammals on Earth[54][55]

  Livestock, mostly cattle and pigs (60%)
  Humans (36%)
  Wild animals (4%)

Counteractions edit

The most obvious solution to the issue of overconsumption is to simply slow the rate at which materials are becoming depleted. From a capitalistic point of view, less consumption has negative effects on economies and so instead, countries must look to curb consumption rates but also allow for new industries, such as renewable energy and recycling technologies, to flourish and deflect some of the economic burdens. Some movements think that a reduction in consumption in some cases can benefit the economy and society. They think that a fundamental shift in the global economy may be necessary to account for the current change that is taking place or that will need to take place. Movements and lifestyle choices related to stopping overconsumption include: anti-consumerism, freeganism, green economics, ecological economics, degrowth, frugality, downshifting, simple living, minimalism, the slow movement, and thrifting.

Many consider the final target of the movements as arriving to a steady-state economy in which the rate of consumption is optimal for health and environment.[56]

Recent grassroots movements have been coming up with creative ways to decrease the number of goods we consume. The Freecycle Network is a network of people in one's community that are willing to trade goods for other goods or services. It is a new take on thrifting while still being beneficial to both parties.[57]

Other researchers and movements such as the Zeitgeist Movement suggest a new socioeconomic model which, through a structural increase of efficiency, collaboration and locality in production as well as effective sharing, increased modularity, sustainability and optimal design of products, are expected to reduce resource-consumption.[58] Solutions offered include consumers using market forces to influence businesses towards more sustainable manufacturing and products.[59]

Another way to reduce consumption is to slow population growth by improving family planning services worldwide. In developing countries, more than 200 million women do not have adequate access.[60] Women's empowerment in these countries will also result in smaller families.

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ Specific example sentence from https://sentence.yourdictionary.com/overconsumption
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Further reading edit

  • Greenfield, Patrick (March 2, 2023). "Overconsumption by the rich must be tackled, says acting UN biodiversity chief". The Guardian.
  • Hickel, Jason (2020). Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World. Penguin Random House. ISBN 9781785152498.
  • Ivanova, Diana; Stadler, Konstantin; Steen-Olsen, Kjartan; Wood, Richard; Vita, Gibran; Tukker, Arnold; Hertwich, Edgar G. (18 December 2015). "Environmental Impact Assessment of Household Consumption". Journal of Industrial Ecology. 20 (3): 526–536. doi:10.1111/jiec.12371. S2CID 155524615.
  • Fifty Possible Ways to Challenge Over-Commercialism by Albert J. Fritsch, SJ, PhD
  • Why people hate fat Americans by Daniel Ben-Ami

External links edit

  • Mother Pelican A journal of sustainability
  • UN Division for Sustainable Development, Agenda 21, Chapter 4 – "Changing Consumption Patterns"
  • Footprint For Nations
  • The Story of Stuff (video)
  • Energy statistics-Oil Consumption by Country
  • World Energy Use Graph
  • Global GDP by Country

overconsumption, economics, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, january, 2012, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, overconsumptio. The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Overconsumption describes a situation where a consumer overuses their available goods and services to where they can t or don t want to replenish or reuse them In microeconomics this may be described as the point where the marginal cost of a consumer is greater than their marginal utility The term overconsumption is quite controversial in use and does not necessarily have a single unifying definition 1 When used to refer to natural resources to the point where the environment is negatively affected it is synonymous with the term overexploitation However when used in the broader economic sense overconsumption can refer to all types of goods and services including manmade ones e g the overconsumption of alcohol can lead to alcohol poisoning 2 3 Overconsumption is driven by several factors of the current global economy including forces like consumerism planned obsolescence economic materialism and other unsustainable business models and can be contrasted with sustainable consumption Defining the amount of a natural resource required to be consumed for it to count as overconsumption is challenging because defining a sustainable capacity of the system requires accounting for many variables The total capacity of a system occurs at both the regional and worldwide levels which means that certain regions may have higher consumption levels of certain resources than others due to greater resources without overconsuming a resource A long term pattern of overconsumption in any given region or ecological system can cause a reduction in natural resources that often results in environmental degradation However this is only when applying the word to human impacts on the environment When used in an economic sense this point is defined as when the marginal cost of a consumer is equal to their marginal utility Gossen s law of diminishing utility states that at this point the consumer realizes the cost of consuming purchasing another item good is not worth the amount of utility also known as happiness or satisfaction from the good they d receive and therefore is not conducive to the consumer s wellbeing 4 When used in the environmental sense the discussion of overconsumption often parallels that of population size and growth and human development more people demanding higher qualities of living currently requires greater extraction of resources which causes subsequent environmental degradation such as climate change and biodiversity loss 5 6 7 8 Currently the inhabitants of high wealth developed nations consume resources at a rate almost 32 times greater than those of the developing world who make up the majority of the human population 7 9 billion people 9 However the developing world is a growing consumer market These nations are quickly gaining more purchasing power and it is expected that the Global South which includes cities in Asia America and Africa will account for 56 of consumption growth by 2030 10 This means that if current trends continue relative consumption rates will shift more into these developing countries whereas developed countries would start to plateau Sustainable Development Goal 12 responsible consumption and production is the main international policy tool with goals to abate the impact of overconsumption Contents 1 Causes 1 1 Economic growth 1 2 Consumerism 1 3 Affluence 2 Effects 2 1 Effects on health 2 2 Global estimates 3 Footprint 4 Counteractions 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksCauses editEconomic growth edit If everyone consumed resources at the US level you will need another four or five Earths Paul R Ehrlich biologist 11 Economic growth is sometimes seen as a driver for overconsumption Economic growth can be seen as a catalyst of overconsumption due to it requiring greater resource input to sustain the growth China is an example where this phenomenon has been observed readily China s GDP increased massively from 1978 and energy consumption has increased by 6 fold 12 By 1983 China s consumption surpassed the biocapacity of their natural resources leading to overconsumption 13 In the last 30 40 years China has seen significant increases in its pollution land degradation and non renewable resource depletion which aligns with its considerable economic growth 14 It is unknown if other rapidly developing nations will see similar trends in resource overconsumption The Worldwatch Institute said China and India with their booming economies along with the United States are the three planetary forces that are shaping the global biosphere 15 The State of the World 2005 report said the two countries high economic growth exposed the reality of severe pollution The report states that The world s ecological capacity is simply insufficient to satisfy the ambitions of China India Japan Europe and the United States as well as the aspirations of the rest of the world in a sustainable way In 2019 a warning on the climate crisis signed by 11 000 scientists from over 150 nations said economic growth is the driving force behind the excessive extraction of materials and overexploitation of ecosystems and that this must be quickly curtailed to maintain long term sustainability of the biosphere 16 17 Also in 2019 the Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services published by the United Nations Intergovernmental Science Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services which found that up to one million species of plants and animals are at risk of extinction from human activity 18 asserted that A key element of more sustainable future policies is the evolution of global financial and economic systems to build a global sustainable economy steering away from the current limited paradigm of economic growth 19 Consumerism edit Consumerism is a social and economic order that encourages the acquisition of goods and services in ever increasing amounts There is a spectrum of goods and services that the world population constantly consumes These range from food and beverage clothing and footwear housing energy technology transportation education health and personal care financial services and other utilities When the resources required to produce these goods and services are depleted beyond a reasonable level it can be considered to be overconsumption Because developing nations are rising quickly into the consumer class the trends happening in these nations are of special interest According to the World Bank the highest shares of consumption regardless of income lie in food beverage clothing and footwear 20 As of 2015 the top five consumer markets in the world were the United States Japan Germany China and France 21 Planned and perceived obsolescence is an important factor that explains why some overconsumption of consumer products exists 22 This factor of the production revolves around designing products with the intent to be discarded after a short period of time Perceived obsolescence is prevalent within the fashion and technology industries Through this technique products are made obsolete and replaced on a semi regular basis Frequent new launches of technology or fashion lines can be seen as a form of marketing induced perceived obsolescence Products designed to break after a certain period of time or use would be considered to be planned obsolescence 23 Affluence edit See also Wealth According to a 2020 paper written by a team of scientists titled Scientists warning on affluence the entrenchment of capitalist growth driven economic systems since World War II gave rise to increasing affluence along with enormous increases in inequality financial instability resource consumption and environmental pressures on vital earth support systems And the world s wealthiest citizens referred to as super affluent consumers which overlap with powerful fractions of the capitalist class are the most responsible for environmental impacts through their consumption patterns worldwide Any sustainable social and environmental pathways must include transcending paradigms fixated on economic growth and also reducing not simply greening the overconsumption of the super affluent the authors contend and propose adopting either reformist policies which can be implemented within a capitalist framework such as wealth redistribution through taxation in particular eco taxes green investments basic income guarantees and reduced work hours to accomplish this or looking to more radical approaches associated with degrowth eco socialism and eco anarchism which would entail a shift beyond capitalism and or current centralised states 24 25 Effects editSee also Economic effects of climate change and I PAT nbsp Waste generation measured in kilograms per person per dayA fundamental effect of overconsumption is a reduction in the planet s carrying capacity Excessive unsustainable consumption will exceed the long term carrying capacity of its environment ecological overshoot and subsequent resource depletion environmental degradation and reduced ecosystem health In 2020 multinational team of scientists published a study saying that overconsumption is the biggest threat to sustainability According to the study a drastic lifestyle change is necessary for solving the ecological crisis According to one of the authors Julia Steinberger To protect ourselves from the worsening climate crisis we must reduce inequality and challenge the notion that riches and those who possess them are inherently good The research was published on the site of the World Economic Forum The leader of the forum professor Klaus Schwab calls to a great reset of capitalism 26 A 2020 study published in Scientific Reports in which both population growth and deforestation were used as proxies for total resource consumption warns that if consumption continues at the current rate for the next several decades it can trigger a full or almost full extinction of humanity The study says that while violent events such as global war or natural catastrophic events are of immediate concern to everyone a relatively slow consumption of the planetary resources may be not perceived as strongly as a mortal danger for the human civilization To avoid it humanity should pass from a civilization dominated by the economy to a cultural society that privileges the interest of the ecosystem above the individual interest of its components but eventually in accordance with the overall communal interest 27 28 nbsp The worldwide prevalence of obesity in males 2008 the darker areas represent a higher percentage of obese males The scale of modern life s overconsumption can lead to a decline in economy and an increase in financial instability 29 Some argue that overconsumption enables the existence of an overclass while others disagree with the role of overconsumption in class inequality 30 Population Development and Poverty all coincide with overconsumption how they interplay with each other is complex 31 Because of this complexity it is difficult to determine the role of consumption in terms of economic inequality nbsp Great Pacific garbage patchIn the long term these effects can lead to increased conflict over dwindling resources 32 and in the worst case a Malthusian catastrophe Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute has said It would take 1 5 Earths to sustain our present level of consumption Environmentally the world is in an overshoot mode 33 As of 2012 the United States alone was using 30 of the world s resources and if everyone were to consume at that rate we would need 3 5 planets to sustain this type of living Resources are quickly becoming depleted with about already gone With new consumer markets rising in the developing countries which account for a much higher percentage of the world s population this number can only rise 34 According to Sierra Club s Dave Tilford With less than 5 percent of world population the U S uses one third of the world s paper a quarter of the world s oil 23 percent of the coal 27 percent of the aluminum and 19 percent of the copper 35 According to BBC a World Bank study has found that Americans produce 16 5 tonnes of carbon dioxide per capita every year By comparison only 0 1 tonnes of the greenhouse gas is generated in Ethiopia per inhabitant 36 A 2021 study published in Frontiers in Conservation Science posits that aggregate consumption growth will continue into the near future and perhaps beyond largely due to increasing affluence and population growth The authors argue that there is no way ethically or otherwise barring extreme and unprecedented increases in human mortality to avoid rising human numbers and the accompanying overconsumption although they do say that the negative impacts of overconsumption can perhaps be diminished by implementing human rights policies to lower fertility rates and decelerate current consumption patterns 37 Effects on health edit A report from the Lancet Commission says the same The experts write Until now undernutrition and obesity have been seen as polar opposites of either too few or too many calories In reality they are both driven by the same unhealthy inequitable food systems underpinned by the same political economy that is single focused on economic growth and ignores the negative health and equity outcomes Climate change has the same story of profits and power 38 Obesity was a medical problem for people who overconsumed food and worked too little already in ancient Rome and its impact slowly grew through history 39 As to 2012 mortality from obesity was 3 times larger than from hunger 40 reaching 2 8 million people per year by 2017 41 Overuse of artificial energy for example in cars hurts health and the planet Promoting active living and reducing sedentary lifestyle for example by cycling reduces greenhouse gas emissions and improve health 42 43 Global estimates edit In 2010 the International Resource Panel published the first global scientific assessment on the impacts of consumption and production 44 The study found that the most critical impacts are related to ecosystem health human health and resource depletion From a production perspective it found that fossil fuel combustion processes agriculture and fisheries have the most important impacts Meanwhile from a final consumption perspective it found that household consumption related to mobility shelter food and energy using products causes the majority of life cycle impacts of consumption According to the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report human consumption with current policy by the year 2100 will be seven times bigger than in the year 2010 45 Footprint editMain article Ecological footprint See also Lists of organisms by population The planet can t support billions of meat eaters David Attenborough natural historian 46 The idea of overconsumption is also strongly tied to the idea of an ecological footprint The term ecological footprint refers to the resource accounting framework for measuring human demand on the biosphere Currently China for instance has a per person ecological footprint roughly half the size of the US yet has a population that is more than four times the size of the US It is estimated that if China developed to the level of the United States that world consumption rates would roughly double 47 Humans their prevailing growth of demands for livestock and other domestic animals has added overshoot through domestic animal breeding keeping and consumption especially with the environmentally destructive industrial livestock production citation needed Globalization and modernization have brought Western consumer cultures to countries like China and India including meat intensive diets which are supplanting traditional plant based diets Between 166 to more than 200 billion land and aquatic animals are consumed by a global population of over 7 billion annually 48 49 A 2018 study published in Science postulates that meat consumption is set to increase as the result of human population growth and rising affluence which will increase greenhouse gas emissions and further reduce biodiversity 50 51 Meat consumption needs to be reduced in order to make agriculture sustainable by up to 90 according to a 2018 study published in Nature 52 56 of respondents to a 2022 climate survey support a carbon budget system to limit the most climate damaging consumption 62 of those under 30 53 Biomass of mammals on Earth 54 55 Livestock mostly cattle and pigs 60 Humans 36 Wild animals 4 Counteractions editThe most obvious solution to the issue of overconsumption is to simply slow the rate at which materials are becoming depleted From a capitalistic point of view less consumption has negative effects on economies and so instead countries must look to curb consumption rates but also allow for new industries such as renewable energy and recycling technologies to flourish and deflect some of the economic burdens Some movements think that a reduction in consumption in some cases can benefit the economy and society They think that a fundamental shift in the global economy may be necessary to account for the current change that is taking place or that will need to take place Movements and lifestyle choices related to stopping overconsumption include anti consumerism freeganism green economics ecological economics degrowth frugality downshifting simple living minimalism the slow movement and thrifting Many consider the final target of the movements as arriving to a steady state economy in which the rate of consumption is optimal for health and environment 56 Recent grassroots movements have been coming up with creative ways to decrease the number of goods we consume The Freecycle Network is a network of people in one s community that are willing to trade goods for other goods or services It is a new take on thrifting while still being beneficial to both parties 57 Other researchers and movements such as the Zeitgeist Movement suggest a new socioeconomic model which through a structural increase of efficiency collaboration and locality in production as well as effective sharing increased modularity sustainability and optimal design of products are expected to reduce resource consumption 58 Solutions offered include consumers using market forces to influence businesses towards more sustainable manufacturing and products 59 Another way to reduce consumption is to slow population growth by improving family planning services worldwide In developing countries more than 200 million women do not have adequate access 60 Women s empowerment in these countries will also result in smaller families See also edit nbsp Environment portalArtificial demand Collaborative consumption Conspicuous consumption Consumption economics Criticism of capitalism Degrowth Effects of the car on societies Energy crisis Environmental studies Externality The Limits to Growth Mottainai Overexploitation Overshoot population Peak copper Peak oil Planet of the Humans film Preorder economy Santosha renunciation of the need to acquire Steady state economy Surplus Terrorized into Being Consumers film World Scientists Warning to HumanityReferences edit Kjellberg H 2008 Market practices and over consumption Consumption Markets and Culture 11 2 151 167 Merriam Webster definition of overconsumption includes this example overconsumption of alcohol https www merriam webster com dictionary overconsumption Specific example sentence from https sentence yourdictionary com overconsumption Todorova Tamara 2020 Diminishing marginal utility and the teaching of economics A note ZBW Leibniz Information Centre for Economics Kiel Hamburg Baste Ivar A Watson Robert T eds 18 February 2021 Making peace with nature a scientific blueprint to tackle the climate biodiversity and pollution emergencies PDF Nairobi Kenya United Nations Environment Programme UNEP ISBN 978 92 807 3837 7 Retrieved 2021 03 11 Job no DEW 2335 NA See document for conditions of reuse Bradshaw Corey J A Ehrlich Paul R Beattie Andrew Ceballos Gerardo Crist Eileen Diamond Joan Dirzo Rodolfo Ehrlich Anne H Harte John Harte Mary Ellen Pyke Graham Raven Peter H Ripple William J Saltre Frederik Turnbull Christine Wackernagel Mathis Blumstein Daniel T 2021 Response Commentary Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future Frontiers in Conservation Science 2 doi 10 3389 fcosc 2021 700869 we devoted an entire section to the interacting and inter dependent components of overpopulation and overconsumption which are for instance also central tenets of the recent Economics of Biodiversity review Dasgupta 2021 Therein the dynamic socio ecological model shows that mutual causation drives modern socio ecological systems Just as it is incorrect to insist that a large global population is the sole underlying cause of biodiversity loss so too is it naive and incorrect to claim that high consumption alone is the cause and so forth Ceballos Gerardo Ehrlich Paul R Dirzo Rodolfo 23 May 2017 Biological annihilation via the ongoing sixth mass extinction signaled by vertebrate population losses and declines PNAS 114 30 E6089 E6096 Bibcode 2017PNAS 114E6089C doi 10 1073 pnas 1704949114 PMC 5544311 PMID 28696295 Much less frequently mentioned are however the ultimate drivers of those immediate causes of biotic destruction namely human overpopulation and continued population growth and overconsumption especially by the rich These drivers all of which trace to the fiction that perpetual growth can occur on a finite planet are themselves increasing rapidly Ceballos Gerardo Ehrlich Paul R Barnosky Anthony D Garcia Andres Pringle Robert M Palmer Todd M 2015 Accelerated modern human induced species losses Entering the sixth mass extinction Science Advances 1 5 e1400253 Bibcode 2015SciA 1E0253C doi 10 1126 sciadv 1400253 PMC 4640606 PMID 26601195 All of these are related to human population size and growth which increases consumption especially among the rich and economic inequity Diamond Jared 2008 01 02 What s Your Consumption Factor The New York Times Buchholz K July 14 2020 Global Purchasing Power is Moving South Digital image Retrieved October 30 2021 https www statista com chart 17805 countries with the biggest purchasing power Biologists say half of all species could be extinct by end of the century The Guardian February 25 2017 Li J amp Yu K 2011 A study on legislative and policy tools for promoting the circular economic model for waste management in China Journal of Material Cycles and Waste Management 13 2 103 112 Gao J amp Tian M 2016 Analysis of over consumption of natural resources and the ecological trade deficit in China based on ecological footprints Ecological Indicators 61 899 904 Pan J 2012 From industrial toward ecological in China Science 336 6087 1397 1397 Renner Michael January 2006 Chapter 1 China India and the New World Order State of the world 2005 A Worldwatch Institute Report on progress toward a sustainable society New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 32666 7 OCLC 57470324 Retrieved 2009 09 14 Ripple William J Wolf Christopher Newsome Thomas M Barnard Phoebe Moomaw William R November 5 2019 World Scientists Warning of a Climate Emergency BioScience 70 8 12 doi 10 1093 biosci biz088 hdl 1808 30278 Retrieved September 1 2020 Carrington Damian November 5 2019 Climate crisis 11 000 scientists warn of untold suffering The Guardian Retrieved September 1 2020 Stokstad Erik 5 May 2019 Landmark analysis documents the alarming global decline of nature Science AAAS Retrieved September 1 2020 Blest Paul May 6 2019 The Planet Is Going Extinct and the People in Power Don t Seem to Care Splinter News Retrieved September 1 2020 The World Bank Group www worldbank org n d The developing world s 4 5 billion low income people already have a 5 trillion market Retrieved November 05 2017 from http datatopics worldbank org consumption market The 25 Largest Consumer s Markets And The Outlook For 2015 n d Retrieved November 05 2017 from https www internationalbusinessguide org 25 largest consumers markets outlook 2015 The Story of Stuff via www youtube com Kuppelweiser Volker G Klaus Phil Manthiou Aikaterini Boujena Othman March 2019 Consumer Responses to planned obsolescence Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services 47 157 165 doi 10 1016 j jretconser 2018 11 014 S2CID 169359689 Wiedmann Thomas Lenzen Manfred Keysser Lorenz T Steinberger Julia K 2020 Scientists warning on affluence Nature Communications 11 3107 3107 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 3107W doi 10 1038 s41467 020 16941 y PMC 7305220 PMID 32561753 Overconsumption and growth economy key drivers of environmental crises Press release Phys org University of New South Wales Retrieved 22 December 2022 Fleming Sean 21 July 2020 This is now the world s greatest threat and it s not coronavirus World Economic Forum Retrieved 5 August 2020 Nafeez Ahmed 28 July 2020 Theoretical Physicists Say 90 Chance of Societal Collapse Within Several Decades Vice Retrieved 9 August 2020 Bologna Mauro Aquino Gerardo 2020 05 06 Deforestation and world population sustainability a quantitative analysis Scientific Reports 10 1 7631 arXiv 2006 12202 Bibcode 2020NatSR 10 7631B doi 10 1038 s41598 020 63657 6 PMC 7203172 PMID 32376879 Vidal John 25 April 2012 World needs to stabilise population and cut consumption says Royal Society The Guardian Retrieved 6 May 2018 Nierenberg Danielle State of the World 2006 a Worldwatch Institute report on progress toward a sustainable society New York London W W Norton OCLC 62865904 Smith R 1993 Overpopulation and overconsumption BMJ 306 6888 1285 1286 doi 10 1136 bmj 306 6888 1285 PMC 1677767 PMID 8518566 Retrieved 6 May 2018 Effects of Over Consumption and Increasing Populations 26 September 2001 Retrieved on 19 June 2007 Brown Lester R 2011 World on the Edge How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse Earth Policy Institute Norton p 7 ISBN 978 1136540752 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine The Story of Stuff via www youtube com Use It and Lose It The Outsize Effect of U S Consumption on the Environment Scientific American 14 September 2012 Bernie Sanders in climate change population control uproar BBC News 5 September 2019 Bradshaw Corey J A Ehrlich Paul R Beattie Andrew Ceballos Gerardo Crist Eileen Diamond Joan Dirzo Rodolfo Ehrlich Anne H Harte John Harte Mary Ellen Pyke Graham Raven Peter H Ripple William J Saltre Frederik Turnbull Christine Wackernagel Mathis Blumstein Daniel T 2021 Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future Frontiers in Conservation Science 1 doi 10 3389 fcosc 2020 615419 Rosane Olivia 29 January 2019 Experts Issue Urgent Call to Act on Triple Threat of Obesity Malnutrition and Climate Change Ecowatch Retrieved 16 August 2019 Haslam D 19 February 2007 Obesity a medical history Obesity Reviews 8 s1 31 36 doi 10 1111 j 1467 789X 2007 00314 x PMID 17316298 S2CID 43866948 Adams Stephen 13 December 2012 Obesity killing three times as many as malnutrition The Telegraph Retrieved 29 September 2019 10 facts on obesity World Health Organization Retrieved 14 November 2019 Blondel Benoit Mispelon Chloe Ferguson Julian November 2011 Cycle more Often 2 cool down the planet PDF European Cyclists Federation Archived PDF from the original on 17 February 2019 Retrieved 16 April 2019 Quam Vivian G M Rocklov Joacim Quam Mikkel B M Lucas Rebekah A I 2017 Assessing Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Health Co Benefits A Structured Review of Lifestyle Related Climate Change Mitigation Strategies International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 14 5 468 doi 10 3390 ijerph14050468 PMC 5451919 PMID 28448460 Assessing the Environmental Impacts of Consumption and Production Priority Products and Materials Archived 13 May 2016 at the Portuguese Web Archive 2010 International Resource Panel United Nations Environment Programme Pachauri R K Meyer L A 2014 Climate Change 2014 Synthesis Report Contribution of Working Groups I II and III to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change PDF Geneva Switzerland IPCC p 24 Retrieved 10 May 2020 Dalton Jane August 26 2020 Go vegetarian to save wildlife and the planet Sir David Attenborough urges The Independent Archived from the original on 2022 05 24 Retrieved February 9 2021 Diamond Jared 2008 01 02 What s Your Consumption Factor The New York Times Best Steven 2014 The Politics of Total Liberation Revolution for the 21st Century Palgrave Macmillan pp 97 160 doi 10 1057 9781137440723 ISBN 978 1137471116 Benatar David 2015 The Misanthropic Argument for Anti natalism In S Hannan S Brennan R Vernon eds Permissible Progeny The Morality of Procreation and Parenting Oxford University Press p 44 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199378111 003 0002 ISBN 978 0199378128 Devlin Hannah July 19 2018 Rising global meat consumption will devastate environment The Guardian Retrieved July 26 2018 Godfray H Charles J Aveyard Paul et al 2018 Meat consumption health and the environment Science 361 6399 Bibcode 2018Sci 361M5324G doi 10 1126 science aam5324 PMID 30026199 S2CID 49895246 Willett Walter Rockstrom Johan Tilman David Godfray H Charles J Fanzo Jess Loken Brent Rayner Mike Scarborough Peter Zurayk Rami October 2018 Options for keeping the food system within environmental limits Nature 562 7728 519 525 Bibcode 2018Natur 562 519S doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0594 0 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 30305731 S2CID 52954514 2022 2023 EIB Climate Survey part 2 of 2 Majority of young Europeans say the climate impact of prospective employers is an important factor when job hunting EIB org Retrieved 2023 03 22 Carrington Damian 21 May 2018 Humans just 0 01 of all life but have destroyed 83 of wild mammals study The Guardian Retrieved 13 July 2019 Baillie Jonathan Zhang Ya Ping 2018 Space for nature Science 361 6407 1051 Bibcode 2018Sci 361 1051B doi 10 1126 science aau1397 PMID 30213888 Kerschner Christian 10 November 2009 Economic de growth vs steady state economy PDF Journal of Cleaner Production 18 2010 Retrieved 6 September 2019 The Freecycle Network www freecycle org Retrieved 2017 05 18 The Zeitgeist Movement Frequently Asked Questions Archived 2012 08 15 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 6 May 2014 Derraik J 2002 The pollution of the marine environment by plastic debris a review Marine Pollution Bulletin 22 9 pp 842 852 https doi org 10 1016 S0025 326X 02 00220 5 The Benefits of Investing in International Family Planning and the Price of Slashing Funding Guttmacher Institute 2017 07 20 Retrieved 2019 01 23 Further reading editGreenfield Patrick March 2 2023 Overconsumption by the rich must be tackled says acting UN biodiversity chief The Guardian Hickel Jason 2020 Less is More How Degrowth Will Save the World Penguin Random House ISBN 9781785152498 Ivanova Diana Stadler Konstantin Steen Olsen Kjartan Wood Richard Vita Gibran Tukker Arnold Hertwich Edgar G 18 December 2015 Environmental Impact Assessment of Household Consumption Journal of Industrial Ecology 20 3 526 536 doi 10 1111 jiec 12371 S2CID 155524615 Fifty Possible Ways to Challenge Over Commercialism by Albert J Fritsch SJ PhD Why people hate fat Americans by Daniel Ben AmiExternal links editMother Pelican A journal of sustainability Optimum Population Trust UN Division for Sustainable Development Agenda 21 Chapter 4 Changing Consumption Patterns Footprint For Nations The Story of Stuff video Energy statistics Oil Consumption by Country World Energy Use Graph Global GDP by Country 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Overconsumption economics amp oldid 1190970139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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