Abbot Dorian S, Malani Anup
Department of the Geophysical Sciences, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
Law School, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2025 Mar 13;20(3):e0319217. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319217. eCollection 2025.
Whether there are imminent physical limits to economic growth has been the focus of a long-standing debate, often (but not exclusively) pitting natural scientists against economists. One side of the debate posits that finite resources constrain human economic growth, the other that productivity improvements and substitution can relax those resource constraints. However, the two sides lack a common framework to resolve their disagreement. We provide this framework and mediate this dispute using a combination of low-order economic and physical models, focusing especially on the waste heat limit. To start, we use a simple accounting identity to show that historical rates of growth in average productivity can support modest economic and population growth (totaling 1.2%). We model the future trajectory of productivity growth by combining a canonical production function (Cobb-Douglas) with a flexible model where population growth drives total-factor-productivity growth. We find remarkable parameter sensitivity: across a plausible range of parameters waste heat either never constrains economic growth in the model or does so in a few hundred years. Interestingly, either decreasing or increasing population growth can dramatically extend the time to heat constraint in the model, the latter due to increases in innovation. Finally, we use a more flexible (constant elasticity of substitution) production function and historical changes in the relative use of different resources to show that humans have the ability to substitute away from resources in shorter supply. Although there are vast uncertainties in this type of projection, our work highlights the potential for an optimistic future for humanity in which economic growth continues on a millennial timescale.
经济增长是否存在迫在眉睫的物理极限一直是长期争论的焦点,这场争论常常(但并非仅仅)使自然科学家与经济学家针锋相对。争论的一方认为有限的资源限制了人类经济增长,另一方则认为生产率的提高和替代可以缓解这些资源限制。然而,双方缺乏一个共同的框架来解决他们的分歧。我们提供了这个框架,并通过结合低阶经济模型和物理模型来调解这场争论,特别关注废热极限。首先,我们使用一个简单的会计恒等式表明,平均生产率的历史增长率能够支持适度的经济和人口增长(总计1.2%)。我们通过将一个标准生产函数(柯布 - 道格拉斯生产函数)与一个灵活的模型相结合来模拟生产率增长的未来轨迹,在这个灵活模型中人口增长推动全要素生产率增长。我们发现参数敏感性显著:在一系列合理的参数范围内,废热在模型中要么永远不会限制经济增长,要么在几百年后才会限制经济增长。有趣的是,无论是降低还是提高人口增长都可以显著延长模型中达到热量限制的时间,后者是由于创新的增加。最后,我们使用一个更灵活的(不变替代弹性)生产函数以及不同资源相对使用情况的历史变化来表明,人类有能力从供应短缺的资源转向其他资源。尽管这种预测存在巨大的不确定性,但我们的工作凸显了人类未来乐观的可能性,即经济增长在千年时间尺度上持续下去。