Global Transitions (Jan 2019)

Measuring regenerative economics: 10 principles and measures undergirding systemic economic health

  • Brian D. Fath,
  • Daniel A. Fiscus,
  • Sally J. Goerner,
  • Anamaria Berea,
  • Robert E. Ulanowicz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
pp. 15 – 27

Abstract

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Applying network science concepts and methods to economic systems is not a new idea. In the last few decades, however, advances in non-equilibrium thermodynamics (i.e., self-organizing, open, dissipative, far-from-equilibrium systems), and nonlinear dynamics, network science, information theory, and other mathematical approaches to complex systems have produced a new set of concepts and methods, which are powerful for understanding and predicting behavior in socio-economic systems. In several previous papers, for example, we used research from the new Energy Network Science (ENS) to show how and why systemic ecological and economic health requires a balance of efficiency and resilience be maintained within a particular a “window of vitality”. The current paper outlines the logic behind 10 principles of systemic, socio-economic health and the quantitative measures that go with them. Our particular focus is on “regenerative aspects”, i.e., the self-feeding, self-renewal, and adaptive learning processes that natural systems use to nourish their capacity to thrive for long periods of time. In socio-economic systems, we demonstrate how regenerative economics requires regular investment in human, social, natural, and physical capital. Taken as a whole, we propose these 10 metrics represent a new capacity to understand, and set better policy for solving, the entangled systemic suite of social, environmental, and economic problems now faced in industrial cultures. Keywords: Regenerative economics, Resilience, Economic networks, Self-organization, Autocatalysis, Socio-ecological systems, Network analysis