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Adam Smith’s ‘Wealth of Nations’ updated for climate challenge
2021-11-09 00:00:00.0     星报-商业     原网页

       

       GLASGOW: Three centuries before Glasgow hosted the COP26 conference aimed at mitigating climate change, it played home to Adam Smith, often credited as the “father of economics.”

       Now, the past and the present are colliding as a group of economists publish a rethink of Smith’s most famous work, “The Wealth of Nations,” to reflect the modern challenge of a warming planet.

       The project, which takes the form of a 60-page book of essays, involved reassessing Smith’s well-known theories of value, development and how markets are shaped by an “invisible hand.”

       Among the contributors are Lord Meghnad Desai of the London School of Economics and former Malaysian central bank chief Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz.

       While Smith’s opus is traditionally viewed as promoting lightly-regulated markets, the authors of the essays argue if he was writing today he would be pushing for financial and economic curbs to accelerate the transition to a low-carbon economy.

       “We cannot know exactly how Smith would have responded to the climate emergency, but given his support for reasonable protections against, for example, abuse of monopolies it seems likely that he would have supported regulation to guard against the destruction of the planet,” Nicola Sturgeon, First Minister of Scotland, wrote in a forward to the book.

       “It is the perfect time to reach back into our past as we look ahead to a future that is cleaner, greener and more just.”

       Among the points made in the essays are that Smith would acknowledge nature provides us with “free” goods that carry a value and that he’d be in favour of financial rules to deter banks from lending to fossil fuel companies.

       The introspection comes at a time where the heavy-lifting of the world’s climate response is shifting from natural scientists, who estimated the scale of the threat, to social scientists, tasked with finding socio-economic solutions.

       Central banks are incorporating climate change into policy decisions and how economies are measured is being rethought to account for the damage done to the earth’s atmosphere and biodiversity.

       Smith was a student and academic at the University of Glasgow, the city currently hosting the United Nations’ annual climate talks. The essays will be explored at an evening lecture series across three days starting yesterday at the university’s Adam Smith Business School. — Bloomberg

       


标签:综合
关键词: Economics     markets     essays     scientists     banks     Adam Smith     Glasgow     climate change    
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