Dan Baxter

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Like hoodwinked mother birds, we student-economists faithfully nurtured the goal of GDP growth, poring over the latest competing theories of what makes economic output grow: was it a nation’s adoption of new technologies, its growing stock of machinery and factories, or even its stock of human capital? Yes, these were all fascinating questions, but not once did we seriously stop to ask whether GDP growth was always needed, always desirable or, indeed, always possible.
Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist
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