Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3390/su10051486
Title: Rethinking teaching of basic principles of economics from a sustainability perspective
Authors: Chindarkar, N 
Thampapillai, D.J 
Issue Date: 2018
Citation: Chindarkar, N, Thampapillai, D.J (2018). Rethinking teaching of basic principles of economics from a sustainability perspective. Sustainability (Switzerland) 10 (5) : 1486. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10051486
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: In this paper, we posit that sustainability warrants explicit recognition in the teaching of basic principles of economics. The conventional exposition of conceptual and analytic frameworks in basic principles in almost all standard economics textbooks overlooks at least two basic flaws. The first of these concerns the collection of residual externalities that exist without being internalized in market transactions and hence fall outside the calculus of national income accounting. For example, not all energy resource prices capture the entirety of the damages inflicted on natural ecosystems. The cumulus of residual externalities threatens the feasibility of sustainability. The second flaw is the absence of sustainability as a necessary condition in the fundamental benchmark of perfect competition (PC). Sustainability, when explicitly introduced in the PC benchmark, results in significant changes to conceptual premises in economics. The most significant of such changes concerns the axiomatic differentiation between "goods" and "bads". © 2018 by the author.
Source Title: Sustainability (Switzerland)
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/178243
ISSN: 20711050
DOI: 10.3390/su10051486
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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