Ecological Sustainability, Intergenerational Resource Transfer and Economic Development

Author(s):  
Edward B. Barbier
Author(s):  
Hakan Sezerel ◽  
Cihan Kaymaz

Does development mean employment and social welfare, or the natural environment, ecosystem, and biodiversity? The answer to this question is sought worldwide while trying to solve the dichotomy between ecological sustainability and the development sustainability. The authors observe a series of pursuits under the names of ecological tourism, environmentally friendly tourism, and socially responsible tourism that emerge in order to overcome this dichotomy in the tourism discipline. They all merge around the common idea of offering a framework that examines economic activities for this dilemma. Meanwhile, this chapter examines the pursuits within the scope of sustainable tourism based on the assumptions of principal ecological approaches (e.g., environment protection, shallow ecology, deep ecology, and social ecology) and determines the position of sustainable tourism within these ecological approaches. It is deduced that sustainable tourism is actually sustainable at very low levels from the perspective of ecological sustainability.


1969 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-110
Author(s):  
A. H. M. Nuruddin Chowdhury

Mobilization of domestic saving for economic development may be attempted by alternative methods, namely, through taxation and public revenue surplus, through higher incentives to savers and financial intermediation, and through income redistribution in favour of sectors which are provided high incentives to save and invest. In view of the lack of an active financial sector, fiscal weaknesses and other market imperfections, Pakistan primarily depended on the last strategy to mobilize domestic saving. This paper elucidates the mechanics of this strategy and some of its effects on sectoral resource transfer, aggregate savings, financial intermediation and resource allocation.


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