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Journal Article

Human well-being in the Anthropocene: limits to growth

Authors

Collste,  David
External Organizations;

Cornell,  Sarah E.
External Organizations;

Randers,  Jorgen
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/johan.rockstrom

Rockström,  Johan
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Stoknes,  Per Espen
External Organizations;

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Citation

Collste, D., Cornell, S. E., Randers, J., Rockström, J., Stoknes, P. E. (2021): Human well-being in the Anthropocene: limits to growth. - Global Sustainability, 4, e30.
https://doi.org/10.1017/sus.2021.26


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_31451
Abstract
Non-technical summary:

Transformation of the world towards sustainability in line with the 2030 Agenda requires progress on multiple dimensions of human well-being. We track development of relevant indicators for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 1–7 against gross domestic product (GDP) per person in seven world regions and the world as a whole. Across the regions, we find uniform development patterns where SDGs 1–7 – and therefore main human needs – are achieved at around US$15,000 measured in 2011 US$ purchasing power parity (PPP). -

Technical summary:

How does GDP per person relate to the achievement of well-being as targeted by the 2030 Agenda? The 2030 Agenda includes global ambitions to meet human needs and aspirations. However, these need to be met within planetary boundaries. In nascent world-earth modelling, human well-being as well as global environmental impacts are linked through economic production, which is tracked by GDP. We examined historic developments on 5-year intervals, 1980–2015, between average income and the advancement on indicators of SDGs 1–7. This was done for both seven world regions and the world as a whole. We find uniform patterns of saturation for all regions above an income threshold somewhere around US$15,000 measured in 2011 US$ PPP. At this level, main human needs and capabilities are met. The level is also consistent with studies of life satisfaction and the Easterlin paradox. We observe stark differences with respect to scale: the patterns of the world as an aggregated whole develop differently from all its seven regions, with implications for world-earth model construction – and sustainability transformations.