ABSTRACT

It is widely accepted that limiting climate change to 2°C will require substantial and sustained investments in low-carbon technologies and infrastructure. However, the dominance of market fundamentalism in economic thinking for the past three decades has meant that governments have generally viewed large spending programs as politically undesirable. In this context, the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) represented a huge opportunity for proponents of public investment in environmental projects or "Green Keynesianism".

This book examines the experience of Australia, Canada, Japan, Korea, and the United States with Green Keynesian stimulus programs in the wake of the GFC. Unfortunately, on the whole, the cases do not provide much optimism for proponents of Green Keynesianism. Much less funding than was originally allocated to green programs was actually spent in areas that would produce an environmental benefit. Furthermore, a number of projects had negligible or even detrimental environmental outcomes. While the book also documents several success stories, the research indicates overall that more careful consideration of the design of green stimulus programs is needed. In addition to concrete policy advice, the book provides a broader vision for how governments could use Keynesian policies to work toward creating an "ecological state".

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of environmental politics, environmental economics, political economy, and sustainable development.

part |60 pages

Introduction

chapter |25 pages

Too big to fail

chapter |16 pages

Green Keynesianism and its discontents 1

chapter |17 pages

Global organizations

Helping or hindering Green Keynesianism? 1

part |78 pages

Case studies

chapter |16 pages

The low-hanging fruit

Home retrofits 1

chapter |21 pages

Green (washed) infrastructure

part |16 pages

Conclusions

chapter |14 pages

A waste of a good crisis?