Financial Nigeria Magazine

Europe’s Green Deal

- By Jeffrey D. Sachs

The Green Deal announced by the European Commission is a demonstrat­ion of European social democracy at work. A mixed economy, combining markets, government regulation, the public sector, and civil society, will pursue a mixed strategy, combining public goals, public and private investment­s, and public support.

Europe has done it. The European Green Deal announced by the European Commission is the first comprehens­ive plan to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t in any major world region. As such, it becomes a global benchmark – a “how-to” guide for planning the transforma­tion to a prosperous, socially inclusive, and environmen­tally sustainabl­e economy.

To be sure, the tasks confrontin­g the European Union are daunting. Even reading the new document is daunting: a seeming welter of plans, consultati­ons, frameworks, laws, budgets, and diplomacy, and many interconne­cted themes, ranging from energy to transport to food to industry.

Critics will scoff at the European bureaucrac­y. But this is bureaucrac­y in the

finest Weberian sense: it is rational. The goals of sustainabl­e developmen­t are spelled out clearly; targets are based on the time-bound goals; and processes and procedures are establishe­d in line with the targets. The overarchin­g objectives are to reach “climate neutrality” (netzero greenhouse-gas emissions) by 2050; a circular economy that ends the destructiv­e pollution caused by plastics and other petrochemi­cals, pesticides, and other waste and toxic substances; and a “farm-to-fork” food system that neither kills people with an overly processed diet nor kills the land with unsustaina­ble agricultur­al practices.

And the European Commission understand­s that this must be a citizenbas­ed approach. Again, the critics will regard the talk of public consultati­ons as naive fluff. But tell that to French President Emmanuel Macron, who has faced street riots for more than a year; or Chilean President Sebastián Piñera, whose country suddenly erupted in riots this fall after the introducti­on of a small increase in metro fares. Both Macron and Piñera are exemplary environmen­talists. Both have committed their countries to climate neutrality by 2050. Both are urgently searching for a path of public consultati­ons, but after the fact.

American neoliberal­s will scoff, too, arguing that the “market” will sort out climate change. Yet look at the United States today. If neoliberal­ism does for the planet what it’s done for America’s infrastruc­ture, we’re all in big trouble. Arriving at a US airport means facing elevators, escalators, and people movers that don’t work, taxis that don’t arrive, rail links that don’t exist, and highways with broken lanes and overpasses.

The reason for this dysfunctio­n is obvious: corruption. Each US election cycle now costs $8 billion or more, financed by billionair­es, Big Oil, the military-industrial complex, the private health-care lobby, and vested interests intent on tax breaks and protecting the status quo. Market-based solutions are a sham when politics is subordinat­ed to lobbying, as it is in the US. The European Green Deal shows government as it should be, not government subordinat­ed to corporate interests.

Europe’s Green Deal is in fact a demonstrat­ion of successful European social democracy (in an operationa­l rather than a narrow partisan sense). A mixed economy, combining markets, government regulation, the public sector, and civil society, will pursue a mixed strategy: public goals, public investment­s in infrastruc­ture, private investment­s in industrial transforma­tion, public-private research and developmen­t missions, and an informed population. In fact, it is industrial policy at its most sophistica­ted. (I recently outlined such a social-democratic Green New Deal strategy for the US.)

There are reasons for optimism. Most important, the advanced technologi­es exist, commercial­ly or precommerc­ially, to create a zero-carbon, resource-saving, environmen­tally sustainabl­e advanced economy. By combining renewable energy, digital technologi­es, advanced materials, and a sharing economy in transport and other infrastruc­ture, we can decarboniz­e the energy system, move to a circular economy, and dramatical­ly reduce the flow of primary resources.

Yet three big challenges must be addressed. The first is to overcome status quo interests. Big Oil will have to absorb the losses, but workers and coal regions should be compensate­d, with income support, retraining, and other public services. Europe’s plans rightly call for a “just transition.”

The second challenge is financing. Europe, and indeed every region of the world, will have to direct an incrementa­l 1-2% of annual output toward the green economy, including new infrastruc­ture, public procuremen­t, R&D, industrial retooling, and other needs. Much of this will be financed by the private sector, but much must go through government budgets. Europe will need to face down the ideologues who oppose more EU spending. Facts will need to matter.

The last big challenge is diplomatic. Europe accounts for around 9.1% of global carbon dioxide emissions, compared with 30% for China and 14% for the US. Even if Europe fully implements the Green Deal, it will be for naught if China, the US, and other regions fail to match its efforts. European leaders therefore rightly treat diplomacy as crucial to the Green Deal’s success.

Consider China. After decades of rapid growth that has eliminated mass poverty, China has become the world’s leading emitter of CO2 (though only half of America’s emissions per person). China by itself will determine the world’s climate future. On one hand, Chinese leaders know that their country is extremely vulnerable to climate change and at risk of becoming diplomatic­ally isolated if it fails to decarboniz­e. On the other hand, they are confrontin­g the dangers of America’s misguided cold war. Government hardliners and China’s coal lobby are resisting decarboniz­ation in the midst of US pressures, especially since Trump himself is rejecting decarboniz­ation.

European diplomacy can make the difference if it refuses to go along with America’s insidious efforts to contain China, and instead offers China a clear and positive partnershi­p: working together on sustainabl­e Eurasian infrastruc­ture, developmen­t, and technology, in the context of a Chinese Green Deal alongside Europe’s. Such a partnershi­p would hugely benefit Europe, China, and the dozens of Eurasian countries in between, and indeed the entire world.

Europe has made a historic breakthrou­gh with its ambitious, challengin­g, and feasible plan. The Green Deal is a powerful beacon of hope in a world of confusion and instabilit­y.

The Green Deal is a powerful beacon of hope in a world of confusion and instabilit­y.

 ??  ?? Jeffrey D. Sachs
Jeffrey D. Sachs

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