Effects of the Circular Economy on Jobs
This literature review seeks to enunciate the different understandings of the term "circular economy" and the baselines that have been used for projections on job impacts and growth. It introduces some of the targets for European countries that are championing the transformation from a linear to a circular economy. The report also outlines the current literature's understanding of job sectors that might change in the future
With growth in GDP and real wages around the world, inequality, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and material extractions have increased at an even higher rate. The resource- and carbon-intensive model of “take, make, waste” is no longer acceptable.
The economic growth in many countries in Africa, Asia and the Pacific, and the Americas remains tied to GHG emissions, material extraction, water, and land use. Pioneers have been forging a different path in understanding the economy. Some countries have started to decouple economic growth from GHG emissions by increasing the use of renewable energy, carbon pricing, green product subsidies, and policies to promote green jobs. European organizations, corporations, and governments have written reports and done preliminary pilots to advance an understanding of job impacts in the circular economy in which prosperity and growth are decoupled from material use and GHG emissions.
Though early reports and legislation on the circular economy date back over a decade, there is still little cohesion on concrete definitions of what a circular economy looks like in practice, including what kinds of jobs fit the description and which ones are affected by a transition toward a circular economy. This means that analyses of job impacts and trade-related effects still differ widely across current publications and approaches.
You might also be interested in
Unlocking Supply Chains for Localizing Electric Vehicle Battery Production in India
This study aims to highlight the key supply chain barriers in localizing electric vehicle (EV) battery cell manufacturing in India. It summarizes consultations with 12 companies, as well as experts and policy-makers, to determine the crucial challenges and opportunities in localizing battery manufacturing in India.
What Will Happen at COP 29?
Talks at the 2024 UN Climate Change Conference (COP 29) will range from defining a way forward on finance through a new collective quantified goal (NCQG) to mitigation, and loss and damage. Ahead of negotiations in Baku, IISD’s Earth Negotiations Bulletin Team Lead Jennifer Bansard examines the agenda and breaks down what to watch as eyes turn to Azerbaijan.
How Indonesia's Incoming President Can Advance the Transition to Clean Energy
With Prabowo Subianto inaugurated as Indonesia’s President, speculation abounds about the new administration’s commitment to the clean energy transition and climate targets, given Prabowo’s positioning as the “continuity candidate.” The question is, what, exactly, will be continued?
Senegal's Big LNG Gamble
This report explores Senegal's nascent liquefied nitrogen gas (LNG) industry by assessing the impacts associated with a new fossil fuel-based industry on the country's environment, economy, and society. It does this by responding to three questions: What have been the impacts of the development of LNG on Senegal to date? Is it viable for Senegal to invest further into an industry that is projected to decline? What risks can Senegal expect should it forge ahead with its LNG development plans?