Economic Impacts on the Environment
Although we are able to suggest what the impacts of the current macro-economy on the environment are, due to lack of data we are unable to quantify them. The following questions may be asked to get a better understanding of the environmental impacts:
- IF economic growth increases at a slow
rate, WHAT are the impacts on
sustainable development?
- IF unemployment increases at a high rate,
WHAT are the impacts on
sustainable development?
- IF trade increases, in response to, amongst
others, globalisation, WHAT are the impacts on
sustainable development?
Table 6.2 below gives some posible answers.
| Table 6.2 Economic growth, unemployment and sustainable development in SA |
| Macroeconomic state |
Key components |
Impact on sustainable development in SA |
| Slow rate of economic growth |
Man made capital (e.g. factories) |
Increasing average growth for manufacturing and construction with a high reliance on polluting technologies which increases levels of pollution and waste
|
Natural capital (e.g. natural resources) |
High reliance on raw materials and energy are unsustainable
|
| Social capital |
"Rainbow nation" plagued with friction and corruption which is socially unsustainable
|
Human capital or labour |
Low productivity and high levels of unemployment leads to a social unsustainable situation
|
Jobless
growth (where economic growth results from mechanisation or improved technologies) |
Poverty |
Half of the population live under the international
poverty line of $2 per day
|
| Crime |
In post-1994 SA crime is a national priority, indicating a socially unsustainable situation
|
As stated in Table 6.2, increased economic growth and trade are likely to result in an increase in resource use, waste and
pollution. These in turn will result in either an increase in social costs (e.g. costs associated with poor health and damage to property)
or direct expenses in the form of waste management, pollution control and rehabilitation. These costs could in turn negatively impact on the economy by drawing investment funds away from other financially more viable opportunities (i.e. money spent on cleaning up or avoiding pollution could well be spent on other things such as education). These impacts have not been empirically quantified on a national level yet.
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There is also information about the Economic Environment in the following reports:
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Metropolitan reports:
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Affairs and Tourism. All Rights Reserved.
Site maintained by the Directorate Environmental Information and Reporting
Last update: October 1999
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