Ezra J. Mishan (November 15, 1917 - September 22, 2014) on Ecological Damage and Capitalism(published by RevoltSource) |
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English Economist best Known for his Work Criticising Economic Growth
: An English economist best known for his work criticising economic growth. Between 1956 and 1977 he worked at the London School of Economics where he became Professor of Economics. In 1965, while at the LSE, he wrote his seminal work The Costs of Economic Growth, but was unable to find a publisher until 1967. (From: Wikipedia.org.)
Quote #4 on Ecological Struggle Quotes >> Ecological Damage and Capitalism
“Free trade, free competition, sustained economic growth, the free movement of peoples -- these were, for Britain at least, the dominant economic aspirations of the nineteenth century. Nor were they entirely irrelevant after the turn of the century. Indeed, one might subscribe to such doctrines without self-deception until the close of World War II. For it was only after the first phase of the postwar recovery in Europe that one could descry the shape of things to come and, in that vision, doubt the relevance of these once-emancipating liberal doctrines to the momentous developments being wrought on our lives by the increasing pace of science and technology. The more salient among these developments are: the unprecedent expansion of the human species having ecological consequences we are only beginning to perceive.”
Source: "The Costs of Economic Growth," by Ezra J. Mishan, Frederick A. Praeger Publishers, New York, Washington, 1967. Part One, Foreword, Page xvi.
"The Costs of Economic Growth," by Ezra J. Mishan, Frederick A. Praeger Publishers, New York, Washington, 1967.
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