Degrowth

Degrowth is an academic and social movement aimed at the planned and democratic reduction of production and consumption as a solution to social-ecological crises. Commonly cited policy goals of degrowth include reducing the environmental impact of human activities, redistributing income and wealth within and between countries, and encouraging a shift from materialistic values to a convivial and participatory society. According to degrowth theorists, degrowth is a multi-layered concept that combines critiques of capitalism, colonialism, patriarchy, productivism, and utilitarianism, while envisioning more caring, just, convivial, happy, and democratic societies.
Degrowth is critical of the concept of growth in gross domestic product as a measure of human and economic development. It argues that modern capitalism's unitary focus on growth causes widespread ecological damage and is unnecessary for the further increase of human living standards.
Degrowth's main argument is that an infinite expansion of the economy is fundamentally contradictory to the finiteness of material resources on Earth. It argues that economic growth measured by GDP should be abandoned as a policy objective. Policy should instead focus on economic and social metrics such as life expectancy, health, education, housing, and ecologically sustainable work as indicators of both ecosystems and human well-being. Degrowth theorists posit that this would increase human living standards and ecological preservation even as GDP growth slows or reverses.
Degrowth, an unorthodox school of thought, occupies a niche in academic literature and faces substantial criticism. Critics describe it as a vague concept that fails to offer an effective strategy for reducing environmental harm, ignores rebound effects, and has little social or political support, whereas price incentives through environmental taxes or tradable permits are much more effective. Critics also note that far-reaching degrowth scenarios are projected to increase extreme poverty, with no historical precedent of the poorest benefiting in a shrinking economy. Systematic reviews describe degrowth research as largely normative opinions rather than analysis, with most proposals lacking precision, depth, and concrete policy design, and rarely using quantitative or qualitative data, formal modelling, or representative samples, while empirical and system-wide analyses remain scarce.
Degrowth is closely associated with eco-socialism and eco-anarchism. Alternatives to degrowth include green growth (economic growth and sustainability are deemed compatible) and agrowth (agnostic on growth, focusing on reducing environmental harm through effective instruments, regardless of whether the economy is growing, stagnant, or contracting).
Critiques
Growth not necessarily harmful
A key criticism of degrowth is that economic growth itself is not the thing that causes harm. In many ways it causes benefits, including in creating resources for environmental protection.
The harmful effects of growth are not universally or irrevocably tied to growth. Economic growth from the installation of solar panels, the provision of human services such as therapy or the renting of bicycles each differs fundamentally from economic growth that derives from air travel, fossil fuel production or ocean trawling.
Where specific environmental impacts have been untied from economic growth, great improvement has been possible without degrowth. Examples include acid rain, ozone depletion, and (in limited cases so far) decarbonization of energy systems.
Response:
Degrowth advocates usually accept that decoupling is possible, eventually. But it is not coming fast enough to bring carbon emissions under control.
Political
Another common critique is political infeasibility. There are no popular political parties with a strong degrowth agenda.
See also
- Global Degrowth Day
- Towards sustainable economies #Degrowth
External links
- The Post Growth Institute
- Can we save the planet by shrinking the economy?, Kelsey Piper, Vox, 2021: The “degrowth” movement to fight the climate crisis offers a romantic, utopian vision. But it’s not a policy agenda.
| Authors | Chris Waterguy |
|---|---|
| License | CC-BY-SA-4.0 |
| Cite as | Chris Waterguy (2021–2022). "Degrowth". Appropedia. Retrieved November 28, 2025. |