Difference between revisions of "Existing scarcity"

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[[Image:Jakarta slumhome.jpg|thumb|220px|Slums built on swamp land near a garbage dump in Jakarta]]
 
[[Image:Jakarta slumhome.jpg|thumb|220px|Slums built on swamp land near a garbage dump in Jakarta]]
 
[[Image:Mwamongu water source.jpg|thumb|220px|Collecting water in Mwamanongu Village, Tanzania]]
 
[[Image:Mwamongu water source.jpg|thumb|220px|Collecting water in Mwamanongu Village, Tanzania]]
 +
[[Image:VariousPills.jpg|thumb|220px|Pharmaceuticals]]
 
All the usual suspects, and a lot applies as much to Western countries as it does to the developing world.
 
All the usual suspects, and a lot applies as much to Western countries as it does to the developing world.
  

Revision as of 22:55, 24 December 2008

So what surmountable scarcity exists today?

Slums built on swamp land near a garbage dump in Jakarta
Collecting water in Mwamanongu Village, Tanzania
Pharmaceuticals

All the usual suspects, and a lot applies as much to Western countries as it does to the developing world.

  • Clean energy
  • Clean water
  • Nutritious food
  • Medicine and medical facilities
  • Decent housing in slum areas
  • Sustainable development 11px-Wikipedia_logo.jpg
  • High quality, interesting education
  • Safe and efficient transportation that doesn't kill or maim significant numbers of passengers or contribute to changing our climate
  • The facilities for people and communities to do more things for themselves - we are too reliant on machines and products from big business
  • Resources to get things done that need to be done - at a community level — sounds woolly perhaps but covers uncountable worthy projects that simply don't get done through lack of funds, manpower or bureaucratic hurdles
  • Quality - quality products and architecture as examples.
  • Time - people's time. Time to follow things important to the individual. Time for other people.

Causes

  • Lack of appropriate technology
  • Locked-up resources
  • Short-term thinking
  • Inadequate co-operation (lack of communication and sharing of knowledge)
  • Self-interest (at many levels)
  • Cultural inertia (that's the way it has always been done)
  • Lack of trust
  • Ignorance (lack of education or understanding)
  • Incompetent government administration
  • Bureaucracy
  • War
  • and in no small part, monetary economics

See also