8 November 2010
The thermodynamic roots of economics
Herman Daly
Professor of Ecological Economics, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland, USA
The first and second laws of thermodynamics should also be called the first and second laws of economics. Why? Because without them there would be no scarcity, and without scarcity, no economics. Consider the first law: if we could create useful energy and matter as we needed it, as well as destroy waste matter and energy as it got in our way, we would have superabundant sources and sinks, no depletion, no pollution, more of everything we want without having to find a place for stuff we don’t want. The first law rules out this direct abolition of scarcity. But consider the second law: even without creation and destruction of matter-energy, we might indirectly abolish scarcity if only we could use the same matter-energy over and over again for the same purposes — perfect recycling. But the second law rules that out. And if one thinks that time is the ultimate scarce resource, well, the entropy law is time’s irreversible arrow in the physical world. So it is that scarcity and economics have deep roots in the physical world, as well as deep psychic roots in our wants and desires.
Economists have paid much attention to the psychic roots of value (e.g., diminishing marginal utility), but not so much to the physical roots. Generally they have assumed that the biophysical world is so large relative to its economic subsystem that the physical constraints (the laws of thermodynamics and ecological interdependence) are not binding. But they are always binding to some degree and become very limiting as the scale of the economy becomes large relative to the containing biophysical system. Therefore attention to thermodynamic constraints on the economy, indeed to the entropic nature of the economic process, is now critical — as emphasized by Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen in his magisterial The Entropy Law and the Economic Process (1971).
Why has his profound contribution been so roundly ignored for forty years? Because as limits to economic growth become more binding, the economists who made their reputations by pushing economic growth as panacea become uncomfortable. Indeed, were basic growth limits recognized, very many very prestigious economists would be seen to have been very wrong about some very basic issues for a very long time. Important economists, like most people, resist being proved wrong. They even bolster their threatened prestige with such pretension as “the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Science in Memory of Alfred Nobel” — which by journalistic contraction becomes, “the Nobel Prize in Economics,” infringing on the prestige of a real science, like physics. Yet it is only by ignoring the most basic laws of physics that growth economics has endured. Honoring the worthy contributions of economists should not require such flummery.
I once asked Georgescu-Roegen why the “MIT-Harvard mafia” (his term) never cited his book. He replied with a Romanian proverb to the effect that, “in the house of the condemned one does not mention the prosecutor.”
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Comments
12 Nov 2010 at 06:38
Anonymous
Thank you Herman for another short but important article, and the link to Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen It is a shame that our economists have too much hubris and not enough humility!12 Nov 2010 at 07:56
Daniël du Toit
Dear professor Daly Thank you for another enlightening contribution linking physics to economy. It makes a further positive contribution in better understanding of the mindset where economics is embedded into the total environment where a business is operating. It makes a direct contribution to my business as being the tour operator for the Kontrei Traveller Portfolio of sustainable tourism destinations and tours as can be seen on www.kontrei.co.za where Each member of The Kontrei Traveller Portfolio(KTP) – a group of entrepreneurs dedicated to sustainable tourism- is actively managing their business in their particular region contributing to: • Conservation : conserving natural and cultural resources used for tourism. • Community : enhancing benefits for host communities at tourism destinations. • Customer : ensuring authentic sense of place experiences for tourists. • Company : managing the long term sustainability of its tourism business. In friendship13 Nov 2010 at 11:55
Ajay Phatak
Eology, equality and ethics dictating the constraints will make economics meaningful. Todays growth economics does not honour any of these and leads common people to the path of no return. Pushing the steady state economics with stress on regenerating natural capital could save us for a much longer time from the looming catastrophe'.