Economics of replacing

 Economics of replacing


The world is changing so fast and unpredictably that no one can "catch" the signals which will be directing all of us to a new scheme: economics of replacing.

Growth is seen everywhere, chaos and separation move the society, world leaders manifest new agendas for a better future

Multination corporations accept and align with every proposal and obey to get more cash flows from the central banks.  

The current problems of our humanity are articulated by the decision-makers and they spread ideas for its solutions simply as suggesting new "better" successors of the old one existing in the economics. 

What do I mean here?


We now have a lot of need for reforming, optimizing, and upgrading systems all over the current national economic developments. 

Despite that, they want to move to a new era which will cost (maybe, because every change has a price) enormous money, time, resources, and lots of damage for nature. Or not?

The arguments are of course well-developed PR messages with keywords: sustainability, growth, green, health, prosperity, climate change, well-being, etc:

At all, I am quite sure that these pledges are good for all of us.

What will replace the /............../?


So onto the topic: Economics of replacing, describes with concerns that we are not prepared how to adopt the change without losing lots of what we are seeking to reduce or optimize like: Carbon footprint; ESG standards; Global warming; Plastics; Waste, and many more.

Lost in the meaning of all this terminology? Read a glossary about them.

Some futurists (I do like them) try to "beat" and solve the problems above with a new idea: The Circular Economy concept


The Circular Economy concept



The role of the city is important because they're all the bad or good things that happen to us. 


All we need is to make some efforts for the Earth; find energy for people; finally, embrace The green idea.


Enough for today... 

What to expect? 

How do businesses and organizations track and show their progress toward the new Economics of replacing?

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