A Systemic Recovery
New economic thinking and acting through a systemic approach could outline policy alternatives to tackle the global-scale systemic challenges of financial, economic, social and environmental emergencies, and help steer our recovery out of the current crisis. A systemic recovery requires an economic...
Autor principal: | |
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Autor Corporativo: | |
Otros Autores: | , , |
Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Paris :
Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development
2022.
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009704991806719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Preface
- Foreword
- Executive Summary
- Understanding complex systems
- Recommendations
- Conclusions
- 1 Introduction and Overview
- References
- 2 A Systemic Approach to Sustainable Recovery
- Introduction
- Natural and human system interactions
- Systemic properties
- Interconnectedness
- Multiple scales
- Efficiency
- Risk and resilience
- Towards a systemic recovery
- States and markets
- Conclusion: Rethinking priorities
- References
- 3 A systemic Resilience Approach to Dealing with Covid-19 and Future Shocks
- Introduction
- The Covid-19 outbreak
- What are the impacts?
- Economic
- Health and social impacts
- Comparing country responses to Covid-19
- Resilience strategies and policies to deal with shocks
- Recommendations
- Strategic policy interventions for Covid-19
- Recovery and building resilience in the local economy
- Household Resilience
- Company/Business resilience
- Conclusion: Anticipate, prepare and build resilience
- References
- Notes
- 4 Resilience Strategies and Approaches to Contain Systemic Threats
- Introduction
- Systemic threats, a growing global concern
- Defining systemic threats
- The diverse nature of systemic threats - the need for resilience
- Resilience as a philosophy and tool
- Resilience for complex systems
- Time and experiential learning
- The shifting capacity of a system
- How resilience addresses systemic threats
- Stages of resilience
- Domains of resilience
- History as a lens for civilisational collapse or survival
- Defining and understanding collapse in history
- Sources of collapse
- What collapses when?
- Why does it collapse?
- Systemic threats in history
- Identification and management of systemic threats
- Methodological input requirements for risk and resilience of systemic threats.
- A semi-quantitative approach: Resilience Matrix
- A quantitative approach: Network science
- Conclusion: Making resilience useful for decision makers
- References
- 5 Beyond Growth
- Introduction
- The goals of economic policy
- New frameworks of economic analysis
- New approaches to economic policy
- Conclusion: Towards a paradigm shift
- References
- Notes
- 6 Build Back Brainier: Base Policies on Brain Science
- Introduction
- Facilitators of a Brain Capital building policy agenda
- A Brain Capital building Policy Lab
- Brain Capital building policy sectors and recommendations
- Quantification of Brain Capital
- Regulatory and legislative approaches
- Regulating neurotoxic chemicals to protect Brain Capital
- Public investment opportunities
- Engaging with the Brain Capital community
- Engaging partners aligned with the agenda
- Conclusion: Overcoming barriers to a Brain Capital building Policy Agenda
- References
- 7 Conclusion: System Threats Should Not Mean Systemic Collapse
- Introduction
- Health
- Employment
- Global value chains
- Inequality
- Environment
- The advantages of a systems approach
- The need for resilience
- References.