Explain Circular Flow
Define/explain neoclassical Economics
Define Welfare Economics
Define environmental economics
Neoclassical economics that accounts for emissions or wastes during production
Define resource Economics
Neoclassical economics
-accounts for the depletion and optimal use of renewable resources
Define Microeconomics
individual and business decisions
Define Macroeconomics
Country and government decisions
What is behavioural economics
letting the data describe human behaviour
-not theory
Explain Production
- as durable, human, intellectual or social capital
Explain consumption
using good/services to satisfy needs and wants
Explain consumption
using good/services to satisfy needs and wants
What are the characteristics of ecological economics
Explain strong sustainability
Human capital cannot substitute fro natural capital (normative)
Explain limits to growth
the law of thermodynamics limit the growth we can have “development” is a better idea than “growth”
Explain human behaviour as a characteristic of ecological economics
We are not just “rational actors” or selfish optimizers, we can derive happiness from a variety of sources
Explain equity as a characteristic of ecological economics
consider the distribution of impacts in present (intergenerational) and future generations (intergenerational)
Explain interdisciplinary as a characteristic of ecological economics
complex problems require insights from multiple disciplines (or transdisciplinary)
What is the growth paradigm
-One direction is: higher GDP =Higher welfare per person
What is Human Based Capital
people, machines, factories
Explain natural capital
the ways nature powers production
What is an example of a flow pollutant
Noise
-High absorptive capacity
Give an example and define of a CAC
Criteria air pollutants
-CO, NOx, O3, SOx, PM10, PM2.5, Pb, VOCs,
Give examples of GHGs
CO2, CH4, O3, N2O, Halocarbons (CFCs)
Give examples of ozone depleting pollutants
CFCs