Slow Down

The Degrowth Manifesto

288 pages

English language

Published by Astra House.

ISBN:
978-1-6626-0272-6
Copied ISBN!
5 stars (2 reviews)

Why, in our affluent society, do so many people live in poverty, without access to health care, working multiple jobs and are nevertheless unable to make ends meet, with no future prospects, while the planet is burning?

In his international bestseller, Kohei Saito argues that while unfettered capitalism is often blamed for inequality and climate change, subsequent calls for “sustainable growth” and a “Green New Deal” are a dangerous compromise. Capitalism creates artificial scarcity by pursuing profit based on the value of products rather than their usefulness and by putting perpetual growth above all else. It is therefore impossible to reverse climate change in a capitalist society—more: the system that caused the problem in the first place cannot be an integral part of the solution.

Instead, Saito advocates for degrowth and deceleration, which he conceives as the slowing of economic activity through the democratic reform of labor and production. In …

1 edition

Good stuff, but a bit wrapped up in exegesis of Marx

4 stars

Good on assessing/criticizing 'green growth', left-accelerationism, SDGs, and the like. Also good on discussing Japanese thinkers and whether Japan's lost decade(s) count as degrowth. Gets a bit bogged down in analyzing whether Marx was leaning away from productivism in his later years, based on reading his unpublished notebooks. Sketches out a pretty plausible model for what degrowth communism could look like, but then gets a bit wrapped up in Chenoweth's 3.5% as all we need to achieve our ends :(

On Rebuilding the Commons

5 stars

This was a brilliant read on the folly of "green growth". Saito does an amazing job at collating the evidence for why trying to implement any "green growth" is bound to fail and how capitalism would subsume those efforts. He also does a great job at providing a potential alternative model - degrowth communism - that could help us overcome those barriers.

These efforts center around re-building the commons, both in the local, environmental sense (e.g. land water) but also the communal, local ownership (of infrastructures) and how co-operative ownership of the commons can bring about those changes. A worthy read to think about how we can collectively act at avoiding even worse-case scenarios in the future.

The one thing that somewhat negatively stood out to me: I get that it's not "just" a collection of evidence but a manifesto, but I was nevertheless surprised how little room Ostrom's work …