¶ … sustainability equated with no growth?
The central analogy of treadmill represented in the 'Treadmill of Production' was a type of running in place as in a typical treadmill without moving forward. It symbolizes a gradual decrease in the efficiency of the productive system. The post Second World War USA's economic system was a type wherein every unit of ecosystem involved in the production system produced less support for the country's workers and their families. However for the investors, it was quite favorable as it helped in the speedier growth towards profits and returns on investments made. Its results worked wonders for the investors but spelled doom for the workers and hence sustainability is equated with zero growth. (Gould; Pellow; Schnaiberg, 2003)
Workers suffered lay-offs in the capital-intensive form of production because of the growing treadmill and the most important perspectives that they were forced to accept was that taking on forward this type of investment was their sole alternative and part of the social progress. Hence, each phase of socially dislocating growth brought about increased social support for the socially dislocating processes. From the perspective of the treadmill theory, augmenting worker productivity is frequently linked with speeding up the treadmill -- i.e. producing lesser worker benefits from a given rate of natural resource selection. The treadmill was so intelligently crafted that in its process it aimed to remove a lot of workers by an increase in physical capital per worker through the use of profits to augment production...
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