
Overcoming the painful side effects of the market economy - a system change with the common good economy?
Content:
In which aspects does society suffer from the current market economy? As a possible way to change the market economy, we take a close look at the economy for the common good. How would the introduction of the common good economy change the current system (companies and rest of the society)? And how does the economy for the common good support a real system change?
Implementation of the SDG’s with the economy for the common good:
https://web.ecogood.org/de/menu-header/blog/die-sustainable-development-goals-und-das-gemeinwohl/
Links:
https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/196572984.pdf#page=187
https://christian-felber.at/artikel/pdf/BuG_175_1-2016.pdf
https://gruenderplattform.de/green-economy/gemeinwohl-oekonomie
https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/140887/1/859675319.pdf
https://cphp-berlin.de/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/CPHP_Impuls_01-2023.pdf
https://germany.ecogood.org/ein-systemwandel-braucht-wirksame-instrumente/
This podcast is part of a larger compendium, where we explore different thoughts and frameworks that can guide sustainable development towards generating systems that serve the needs of the future. Of crucial importance are the ideas that systems need to serve the mass of people, contribute to stabilize ecosystem services and enable an applicable transition. The well-known Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are very essential, but often lack the needed transformation. So dive into the journey – from SDGs to GDS (generating different systems) to hear about holistic ideas for a better future.
The compendium is the work of an international students group of the master's programme Global Change Management (GCM) class 2022/2023, from the Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development.
If you would like to learn more about practical examples that relate to underlying concepts like the Doughnut Economy and Planetary Boundaries, please check out our website: https://hnee-gcm-compendium.vercel.app/ that was made from a previous semester group.