Summary: Solutions to the Fossil Fuel Economy and the Myths Accelerating Climate and Economic Collapse
http://membrane.com/global_warming/Basic-Economics.html
In this paper, Daniel Brouse argues that climate change and misguided economic policies are converging to create systemic risks that threaten both global capitalism and human habitability. He frames climate change as a nonlinear system driven by tipping points and feedback loops; once breached, these triggers can cascade into a “Domino Effect” of economic and ecological collapse.
The paper criticizes dominant political trends—high taxes on productivity, protectionism, nationalism, populism, and anti-immigration sentiment—arguing that they undermine long-term economic growth. Income taxes, in particular, are described as suppressing productivity and capital formation. In contrast, Brouse advocates shifting taxation away from labor and toward resource consumption—especially fossil fuels. He proposes steep direct taxes on coal, oil, and natural gas to accelerate decarbonization and send clear market signals.
Climate change is presented not only as an environmental issue but as a systemic financial threat. Rising climate-related disasters are straining insurers and could destabilize the broader financial system. Pollution and warming are also driving public health crises that threaten to overwhelm healthcare systems and government entitlement programs.
The paper strongly defends immigration as essential to economic sustainability. With aging populations and declining birth rates, Brouse argues that large-scale immigration is necessary to sustain GDP growth and maintain Social Security and Medicare. Without it, fiscal imbalance becomes mathematically unavoidable.
Looking forward, he outlines two paths:
- Preserve the current economic structure by embracing large-scale immigration.
- Undertake systemic reform by replacing income taxes with consumption and pollution taxes while aggressively phasing out fossil fuels and investing in clean energy.
The paper concludes with a stark climate warning. Updated modeling that incorporates social-ecological feedback loops projects potential warming of up to 9°C—far beyond earlier estimates. At such levels, large regions could become uninhabitable due to extreme heat, sea-level rise, food system collapse, and mass migration. The climate system, he argues, is entering a phase of compound risk and cascading breakdown.
The central message: economic myths and political short-termism are accelerating both climate and financial instability. Immediate structural reform—economically and energetically—is essential to prevent cascading collapse.