Back to Course

Regenerative Economy

0% Complete
0/0 Steps
  1. Module 01: Introduction
    1.1 Lesson-1: Interested in Regeneration?
  2. 1.2 Lesson-2: What is Regenerative Economy?
  3. 1.3 Lesson-3: Principles of Regenerative Economy
    9 Topics
  4. 1.4 Lesson-4: Towards Regenerative Economy
    1 Quiz
  5. Module-02: Go Beyond the Circles
    2.1 Lesson-1: From Linear to Circular Economy
  6. 2.2 Lesson-2: The Nested System
  7. 2.3 Lesson-3: From Focusing on the Product to Focusing on the Process
    1 Quiz
  8. Module-03: Regenerative Economy Mindset Shifting
    3.1 Lesson-1: Shift Mindset to Transform the System
    1 Topic
  9. 3.2 Lesson-2: Shift Mindset: “Doing” to “Being”
    2 Topics
  10. 3.3 Lesson-3: Shift Mindset: “Ego” to “Soul”
    1 Topic
    |
    1 Quiz
  11. Module 04: Regenerative Economy Framework
    4.1 Lesson-1: Levels of Paradigm
    6 Topics
  12. 4.2 Lesson-2: Understanding Levels of Paradigm as a System
  13. 4.3 Lesson-3: Evolving a Practice of Regenerative Economics
    5 Topics
  14. 4.4 Lesson-4: Quantitative Growth to Qualitative Growth
    2 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  15. Module 05: Collaborative Approach to Regenerative Economy
    5.1 Lesson-1: Ecology and Regenerative Economy 1
  16. 5.2 Lesson-2: Economy of Human Development
    9 Topics
  17. 5.3 Lesson-3: Regenerative Approach to Whole Economic Development
    7 Topics
  18. 5.4 Lesson-4: Regenerative Culture
    3 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  19. Module 06: Regenerative Investment
    6.1 Lesson-1: The Role of Businesses
    2 Topics
  20. 6.2 Lesson-2: Investing from a Regenerative Mind
    1 Topic
  21. 6.3 Lesson-3: Food System Investing in a Regenerative Economy
    4 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  22. Conclusion
Lesson 3, Topic 8
In Progress

1.3.8 Principle 9: Encourage positive action and restrict speculative and overly extroverted behavior

April 2, 2023
Lesson Progress
0% Complete

How can an economy distinguish between income earned through Wall Street speculation and income earned from creating goods or raising children? Because GDP growth only considers the volume of money exchanged (or the total system throughflow in ENA words), and because it counts harmful activities like theft, cancer, as well as oil spills as positive changes, it is unable to discern between a healthy economy and a bubble. The alarming outcome of today is that the real-economy networks’ deteriorating state is concealed by a fleeting fog of speculative activity. Regenerative economics, on the other hand, are very concerned with constructive activities because they help to develop economic capital and capabilities. Hence, actions that increase infrastructure, production, power, and learning are valued by regenerative economics. They aim to restrict two things: 1) excessive speculation, which produces bubbles of fictitious wealth fueled mostly by frenzy; and 2) excessive extraction, which results in economic necrosis.

error: Content is protected!
en_US