• Author/Authors

    Moran، نويسنده , , Daniel D. and Lenzen، نويسنده , , Manfred and Kanemoto، نويسنده , , Keiichiro and Geschke، نويسنده , , Arne، نويسنده ,

  • DocumentNumber
    3542552
  • Title Of Article

    Does ecologically unequal exchange occur?

  • شماره ركورد
    6100
  • Latin Abstract
    The hypothesis of ecologically unequal exchange posits that low and middle income developing nations maintain an ecological deficit with wealthy developed nations, exporting natural resources and high impact commodities thereby allowing wealthy economies to avoid operating ecologically impactful industries at home. In this survey we assess the footprint of consumption of 187 countries using eight indicators of environmental pressure in order to determine whether or not this phenomenon occurs. We use input–output analysis with a new high resolution global Multi-Region Input–Output table to calculate each trading pairʹs balance of trade in biophysical terms of: GHG emissions, embodied water, and scarcity-weighted water content, air pollution, threatened species, Human Appropriated Net Primary Productivity, total material flow, and ecological footprint. We test three hypotheses that should be true if ecologically unequal exchange occurs. One: The inter-regional balance of trade in biophysical terms is disproportional to the balance of trade in financial terms. We find this is true, though not strongly so. Two: Exports from developing nations are more ecologically intensive than those from developed nations. We find this is true. Three: High-income nations disproportionately exert ecological impacts in lower income nations. We find this is false: high income nations are mostly exporters, not importers, of biophysical resources.
  • From Page
    177
  • NaturalLanguageKeyword
    ecological footprint , HANPP , Multi-region input–output analysis , Material flow analysis , MFA , International trade , Ecologically unequal exchange , Embodied CO2
  • JournalTitle
    Studia Iranica
  • To Page
    186
  • To Page
    186