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Natural Capital

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2009

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Summary

Interest in the concept of natural capital stems from the key role which this concept plays in certain attempts to elucidate the goal of sustainable development—a goal which currently preoccupies environmental policy-makers. My purpose in this paper is to examine the viability of what, adapting an expression of Bryan Norton's, may be termed the ‘social scientific approach’ to natural capital (Norton, 1992, p. 97). This approach largely determines the way in which environmental concern is currently being represented in the environmental policy community.

On any account of sustainability—and these are now legion—something or other is supposed to be kept going, or at any rate not allowed to decline, over time. In Blueprint for a Green Economy (Pearce et al., 1989), which I shall treat as epitomizing the social scientific approach, sustainable development (or sustainability—I shall not trouble over the distinction) is construed as requiring that each generation leave its successor a stock of capital assets no less than it receives. In other words, the requirement is that capital—explained also as capital wealth or productive potential—be constant, or at any rate not decline, over time. A distinction is drawn between natural and human-made capital, generating two possible versions of the sustainability requirement, each with variations:

  1. (i) that overall capital—the total comprising both natural and human-made capital—should not decline, or

  2. (ii) that natural capital in particular should not decline (Pearce et al., 1989, p. 34).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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