• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Ensuring a Post-COVID Economic Agenda Tackles Global Biodiversity Loss
  • Contributor: McElwee, Pamela [Author]; Turnhout, Esther [Author]; Chiroleu-Assouline, Mireille [Author]; Clapp, Jennifer [Author]; Isenhour, Cindy [Author]; Jackson, Tim [Author]; Eszter, Kelemen [Author]; Miller, Daniel [Author]; Rusch, Graciela [Author]; Spangenberg, Joachim [Author]; Waldron, Anthony [Author]; Baumgartner, Rupert [Author]; Bleys, Brent [Author]; Howard, Michael [Author]; Mungata, Eric [Author]; Ring, Irene [Author]; Santos, Rui [Author]
  • Published: [S.l.]: SSRN, 2020
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (31 p)
  • Language: English
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Nach Informationen von SSRN wurde die ursprüngliche Fassung des Dokuments June 22, 2020 erstellt
  • Description: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused dramatic impacts to the global economy that are unprecedented in scale and scope. Many governments are now proposing recovery packages to get back to normal economic functioning, but the 2019 IPBES Global Assessment indicated that business as usual was responsible for ecosystem degradation and species extinction risks. Therefore, a vision of a post-COVID world needs to put biodiversity measures front and center, but so far, most attention related to the current pandemic has primarily focused on wildlife trade bans and expanded nature conservation. Such limited measures do not tackle the wider issues and drivers that create economic demands and ecological disruptions in the first place. Consequently, in this paper we put forth suggestions for short term stimulus measures and longer-term revamping of global, national and local economies that take biodiversity into account. These include measures to shift away from economic activities that cause undue harm to biodiversity and ecosystems (such as harmful subsidies and unsustainable production and trade) and towards activities that support ecosystem resilience through a variety of economic tools (including incentives, regulation, fiscal policy and employment programs). Only by treating the current pandemic as an opportunity to reset the global economy to move to a more sustainable path are we likely to be able to reverse decades of biodiversity and ecosystem losses
  • Access State: Open Access