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  • You've heard them,

  • politicians, economists, executives - all saying the same thing:

  • The economy is recovering!

  • Recovering to what?

  • To its normal state of constant growth.

  • In the next five minutes we're going to see why they're wrong,

  • why economic growth is effectively over,

  • and what that means for the economy, for you

  • and for your family.

  • It started centuries ago. There had been economic expansion before but

  • it was slow and cyclical.

  • Empires rose and fell.

  • But with the industrial revolution

  • rapid growth became normal.

  • Economists tell us this was because of innovation,

  • division of labor and increased trade,

  • but it was mostly a result of cheap energy.

  • It takes energy to do things and with cheap coal and oil people could

  • suddenly do more than ever. First coal then oil sped up trade by fueling

  • our prized inventions:

  • Railroads,

  • automobiles and airplanes.

  • Economists

  • assumed that growth could go on forever.

  • It was an absurd notion.

  • Nobody stopped to think that all this industrial growth was happening on a

  • small planet with only so much oil and soil,

  • only so many forests and fish.

  • We were growing on borrowed time

  • and we all got hooked on growth.

  • Rising GDP numbers became our main measure of success.

  • More, bigger and faster meant better.

  • The first warning signs came in the 1970s.

  • A team of scientists programmed a computer with data about population

  • growth, rising consumption

  • and resource depletion.

  • Their conclusion:

  • There are limits to growth.

  • Mainstream economists

  • attacked those findings using nasty rhetorical tricks, but forty years later

  • the same conclusion holds.

  • In fact the industrial economies of the world's wealthiest nations

  • started stagnating years ago as resources began to run out. Governments,

  • businesses, and households went into hock up to their eyeballs

  • gorging on easy credit. The financial system created ever more

  • complex securities and derivatives schemes to soak up all of that debt

  • and make perpetually rising imaginary profits on imaginary assets.

  • But money and debt depend on natural resources piling up debt year after year

  • doubling it then doubling it again meant piling up claims on resources that were

  • shrinking as we depleted them.

  • It was a pyramid scheme,

  • the mother of all bubbles

  • and in 2008

  • it burst.

  • Governments and central banks tried to reinflate the bubble with bailouts and

  • stimulus packages funded by public debt.

  • But there are practical limits to debt

  • and we're hitting them.

  • There are practical limits to energy sources

  • and we're hitting them.

  • There are real limits to the planet's ability to absorb our wastes

  • and industrial accidents

  • and we've hit those too.

  • We're being told that the economy is recovering

  • but take away new debt the government has taken on since 2008 to

  • stimulate the economy

  • and there's been no economic growth.

  • There is no recovery

  • it's all being done with more debt.

  • We've already mortgaged our grandchildren's future

  • but to keep the economy from relapsing we'll need to borrow even more.

  • The game is up.

  • We've reach the end of economic growth as we've known it.

  • They're lying to you.

  • But they can't help it

  • We're all addicted to growth.

  • We all want better jobs and higher returns on investments

  • but we live on a finite planet

  • The end of growth is not the fault of any one politician or political party

  • but some people benefited from growth more than others.

  • We can live without economic growth but we will have to start doing a few things

  • differently.

  • We have to measure and aim for improvements in life that don't require

  • increasing our consumption of fossil fuels and other depleting resources

  • or piling on more debt.

  • Freedom. Being with the people we love.

  • Good health and the time to enjoy it.

  • A secure happy community.

  • We have to work together to build local economies where we can live and prosper.

  • But, and this is a big but...

  • Without cheap fossil fuels and without borrowing from the future.

  • The longer we put this off

  • the harder it will be.

  • Economic growth. It's over.

  • LET'S MOVE ON.

You've heard them,

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