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Anonymous ID: OWzcXzBxUnited Kingdom /pol/510352060#510354495
7/14/2025, 3:01:08 PM
>>510352060
>Exponential growth in population and economy is widely considered unsustainable due to the finite nature of resources and environmental constraints. The global economic system is based on the concept of endless growth, but this is mathematically and ecologically impossible in a finite world.
Exponential growth, characterized by a constant proportional increase, will eventually lead to resource depletion and environmental degradation, making it unsustainable in the long term.

>Finite Resources: Exponential growth cannot continue indefinitely because of limiting factors such as resource availability, environmental constraints, competition, predation, and disease.
These factors restrict growth rates in real-world scenarios like population growth, resources, or economy, eventually leading to the need for sustainable growth models.

>Environmental Constraints: The environment can only support a limited number of individuals or sustain a certain level of economic output. Carrying capacity is the maximum number of individuals that an environment can support, and exceeding this limit leads to resource scarcity and ecological collapse.

>Economic Growth: The global economy is already too big to be sustainable, and the challenge is not to grow even bigger but to shrink while finding more equitable ways to share its benefits.

>Economic growth is required to be exponential, which drives a corresponding increase in the material footprint, making it difficult to decouple growth from resource consumption.

>Historical Perspectives: The idea that exponential growth cannot continue forever in a finite world has been discussed by various experts, including economists and biologists. For example, Kenneth Boulding stated that anyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist.