Economists on environmental
limits
The response by economists to The Limits to Growth was almost entirely hostile. Given their commitment to
economic growth as the solution to the problem of poverty and the widespread existence of the problem, noted in
the previous section, this was hardly surprising. Prominent among the critical responses from economists were
those by Page (1973), Nordhaus (1972), Beckerman (1972, 1974), Cole et al. (1973) and Lecomber (1975).
According to one eminent economist it was ‘a brazen, impudent piece of nonsense that nobody could possibly
take seriously’ (Beckerman, 1972). As noted above, economists have had much less to say, and much less
critical things to say, about the sequel, Beyond the Limits. In a foreword to it, a Nobel laureate in economics, Jan
Tinbergen, says of it: ‘We can all learn something from this book, especially we economists’.
• The main line of the criticism of the original by economists was that the feedback loops in World3 were poorly
specified in that they failed to take account of behavioural adjustments operating through the price mechanism. In
particular, it was argued that changing patterns of relative scarcity would alter the structure of prices, inducing
behavioural changes in resource-use patterns. Given a well-functioning market mechanism, it was argued, limits
to growth would not operate in the way reported by the modelling team. It was conceded by some of the
economist critics that the force of this argument was weakened by the fact that for many environmental resources
and services, markets did not exist, or functioned badly where they did. However, it was also argued that such
‘market failure’ could be corrected by the proper policy responses to emerging problems. This presumes that the
sorts of substitutions for environmental services that we discussed above can be made, given properly functioning
markets or policy-created surrogates for such, to the extent that will overcome limits that would otherwise exist. A
major, and largely unresolved, question in the debates about the existence of a sustainability problem is the
existence and effectiveness of substitutes for environmental services.