Shaping planetary health inequities: the political economy of the Australian growth model
Date
2023-08
Authors
Frank, Nicholas
Arthur, Megan
Friel, Sharon
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Carfax Publishing, Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Planetary health equity the equitable enjoyment of good health and wellbeing in a sustainable ecosystem is under threat from anthropogenic climate change and economic and social inequities. Driving these major challenges is the global consumptogenic system that encourages excessive production and consumption goods and services that are harming human and planetary health. Growth models lie at the core of the consumptogenic system. This paper examines the sources of economic growth in Australia, the coalitions that sustain this approach politically, and the implications of these dynamics for planetary health equity. Australia's consumption-led growth model is underpinned by a combination of rising house prices and a permissive credit regime. This growth model is supported by a dominant growth coalition of producer interests, elements of organised labour, and property owners. The growth coalition has been able to successfully generate growth model policy convergence between the mainstream political parties. In turn this growth model, and associated growth coalition, has undermined the pursuit of planetary health equity in Australia by incentivising and driving excessive consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and economic inequality.
Description
Keywords
capitalism, comparativepolitical economy, growthmodels, equity
Citation
Collections
Source
New Political Economy
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License