Version 1.0 (September 2020)
In the book Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist, along with the core idea of the Doughnut, Kate Raworth offers these Seven Ways to transform our thinking and imagination, from the old economic thinking of the 20th century to the thinking we will need to guide us towards a new goal for humanity, that of the Doughnut, and of meeting the needs of all people within the means of the planet.
What you find here is a summary of each of these Seven Ways. The first summary is a one-page digram with all Seven Ways and images associated with them all in one place. After this there are seven 90 second animations to capture the essence of each of the Seven Ways. These are accompanied with a short paragraph to explain each in a bit more detail, along with some discussion questions that could be used for a discussion topic, whether in a classroom, a book club or round the kitchen table.
The videos are available in 33 languages. To access these, select subtitles/close captions (the 'CC' button) and then settings (the cog icon) and you'll see all the languages available.
For over half a century, economists have fixated on GDP as the first measure of economic progress, but GDP is a false goal waiting to be ousted. The 21st century calls for a far more ambitious and global economic goal: meeting the needs of all within the means of the living planet. Draw that goal on the page and – odd though it sounds – it comes out looking like a doughnut. The challenge now is to create local to global economies that ensure that no one falls short on life’s essentials – from food and housing to healthcare and political voice – while safeguarding Earth’s life-supporting systems, from a stable climate and fertile soils to healthy oceans and a protective ozone layer. This single switch of purpose transforms the meaning and shape of economic progress: from endless growth to thriving in balance.
Discussion questions:
In April 1947, an ambitious band of economists crafted a neoliberal story of the economy and, since Thatcher and Reagan came to power in the 1980s, it has dominated the international stage. Its narrative about the efficiency of the market, the incompetence of the state, the domesticity of the household and the tragedy of the commons, has helped to push many societies towards social and ecological collapse. It’s time to write a new economic story fit for this century – one that sees the economy’s dependence upon society and the living world. This story must recognize the power of the market—so let’s embed it wisely; the partnership of the state—so let’s hold it to account; the core role of the household—so let’s value its contribution; and the creativity of the commons—so let’s unleash their potential.
Discussion questions:
The character at the heart of 20th century economics—‘rational economic man’—presents a pitiful portrait of humanity: he stands alone, with money in his hand, a calculator in his head, ego in his heart, and nature at his feet. Worse, when we are told that he is like us, we actually start to become more like him, to the detriment of our communities and the planet. But human nature is far richer than this, as emerging sketches of our new self-portrait reveal: we are reciprocating, interdependent, approximating people deeply embedded within the living world. It’s time to put this new portrait of humanity at the heart of economic theory so that economics can start to nurture the best of human nature. Doing so will give us—all ten billion of us to come—a far greater chance of thriving together.
Discussion questions:
Economics has long suffered from physics envy: awed by the genius of Isaac Newton and his insights into the physical laws of motion, 19th century economists became fixated on discovering economic laws of motion. But these simply don’t exist: they are mere models, just like the theory of market equilibrium which blinded economists to the looming financial crash of 2008. That’s why 21st-century economists embrace complexity and evolutionary thinking instead. Putting dynamic thinking at the heart of economics opens up new insights for understanding the rise of the one percent and the boom and bust of financial markets. It’s time to stop searching for the economy’s elusive control levers (they don’t exist), and instead start stewarding the economy as an ever-evolving system.
Discussion questions:
In the 20th century economic theory whispered a powerful message when it comes to inequality: it has to get worse before it can get better, and growth will eventually even things up. But extreme inequality, as it turns out, is not an economic law or necessity: it is a design failure. Twenty-first century economists recognize that there are many ways to design economies to be far more distributive of value among those who help to generate it. And that means going beyond redistributing income to pre-distributing wealth, such as the wealth that lies in controlling land, enterprise, and the power to create money.
Discussion questions:
Economic theory has long portrayed a clean environment as a luxury good, affordable only for the well-off—a view that says that pollution has to increase before it can decline, and (guess what), growth will eventually clean it up. But as with inequality there is no such economic law: environmental degradation is the result of degenerative industrial design. This century calls for economic thinking that unleashes the potential of regenerative design in order to create a circular, not linear, economy—and to restore ourselves as full participants in Earth’s cyclical processes of life.
Discussion question:
To the alarm of governments and financiers, forecasts for GDP growth in many high-income countries are flat-lining, opening up a crisis in growth-based economics. Mainstream economics views endless GDP growth as a must, but nothing in nature grows forever, and the economic attempt to buck that trend is raising tough questions in high-income but low-growth countries. That’s because today we have economies that need to grow, whether or not they make us thrive. What we need are economies that make us thrive, whether or not they grow. That radical flip in perspective invites us to become agnostic about growth and to explore how our economies—which are currently financially, politically and socially addicted to growth—could learn to live with or without it.
Discussion questions:
And now... It's Time for Planetary Economics
The making of the Seven Ways to Think animations
All of the above videos are licensed under a Creative Commons BY SA 4.0 license. For full details please visit our Licensing Rules. When using one or more of the videos you must also provide the attributions listed below as appropriate:
Change the Goal
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Jonny Lawrence at vimedy.com
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
Tell a New Story
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Tom Lee www.rocket-visual.co.uk
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
Nurture Human Nature
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Jonny Lawrence at vimedy.com
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
Get Savvy With Systems
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Ainslie Henderson, Michael Hughes, Will Anderson
Sound design: Keith Duncan
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
Design to Distribute
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Mighty Oak
Sound design: Keith Duncan
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
Create to Regenerate
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Ainslie Henderson
Compositing: Will Anderson
Sound design: Keith Duncan
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
Be Agnostic About Growth
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Tom Lee at Rocket-Visual
Sound design: Keith Duncan
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
It's Time for Planetary Economics
Doughnut Economics Action Lab
Voice: Kate Raworth
Animation: Mighty Oak Grows
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
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