The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways

The Economic Case for Nature is part of a series of papers by the World Bank that lays out the economic rationale for investing in nature and recognizes how economies rely on nature for services that are largely underpriced. This report presents a first-of-its-kind global integrated ecosystem-eco...

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Main Authors: Johnson, Justin Andrew, Ruta, Giovanni, Baldos, Uris, Cervigni, Raffaello, Chonabayashi, Shun, Corong, Erwin, Gavryliuk, Olga, Gerber, James, Hertel, Thomas, Nootenboom, Christopher, Polasky, Stephen
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/445311625065610639/A-Global-Earth-Economy-Model-to-Assess-Development-Policy-Pathways
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35882
id okr-10986-35882
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-358822021-07-01T05:11:30Z The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways Johnson, Justin Andrew Ruta, Giovanni Baldos, Uris Cervigni, Raffaello Chonabayashi, Shun Corong, Erwin Gavryliuk, Olga Gerber, James Hertel, Thomas Nootenboom, Christopher Polasky, Stephen NATURE ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY BIODIVERSITY SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT CLIMATE CHANGE RESILIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION CARBON SEQUESTRATION NATURAL CAPITAL POLITICAL ECONOMY The Economic Case for Nature is part of a series of papers by the World Bank that lays out the economic rationale for investing in nature and recognizes how economies rely on nature for services that are largely underpriced. This report presents a first-of-its-kind global integrated ecosystem-economy modelling exercise to assess economic policy responses to the global biodiversity crisis. Modeling the interaction between nature’s services and the global economy to 2030, the report points to a range and combination of policy scenarios available to reduce the impact of nature’s loss on economies. This modeling framework represents an important steppingstone towards ‘nature-smart’ decision-making, as it seeks to support policymakers who face complex tradeoffs involving the management of natural capital, and hence achieving growth that is resilient and inclusive. 2021-06-30T20:35:22Z 2021-06-30T20:35:22Z 2021-06-29 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/445311625065610639/A-Global-Earth-Economy-Model-to-Assess-Development-Policy-Pathways http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35882 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic NATURE
ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
BIODIVERSITY
SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT
CLIMATE CHANGE RESILIENCE
CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION
CARBON SEQUESTRATION
NATURAL CAPITAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY
spellingShingle NATURE
ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
BIODIVERSITY
SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT
CLIMATE CHANGE RESILIENCE
CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION
CARBON SEQUESTRATION
NATURAL CAPITAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY
Johnson, Justin Andrew
Ruta, Giovanni
Baldos, Uris
Cervigni, Raffaello
Chonabayashi, Shun
Corong, Erwin
Gavryliuk, Olga
Gerber, James
Hertel, Thomas
Nootenboom, Christopher
Polasky, Stephen
The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways
description The Economic Case for Nature is part of a series of papers by the World Bank that lays out the economic rationale for investing in nature and recognizes how economies rely on nature for services that are largely underpriced. This report presents a first-of-its-kind global integrated ecosystem-economy modelling exercise to assess economic policy responses to the global biodiversity crisis. Modeling the interaction between nature’s services and the global economy to 2030, the report points to a range and combination of policy scenarios available to reduce the impact of nature’s loss on economies. This modeling framework represents an important steppingstone towards ‘nature-smart’ decision-making, as it seeks to support policymakers who face complex tradeoffs involving the management of natural capital, and hence achieving growth that is resilient and inclusive.
format Report
author Johnson, Justin Andrew
Ruta, Giovanni
Baldos, Uris
Cervigni, Raffaello
Chonabayashi, Shun
Corong, Erwin
Gavryliuk, Olga
Gerber, James
Hertel, Thomas
Nootenboom, Christopher
Polasky, Stephen
author_facet Johnson, Justin Andrew
Ruta, Giovanni
Baldos, Uris
Cervigni, Raffaello
Chonabayashi, Shun
Corong, Erwin
Gavryliuk, Olga
Gerber, James
Hertel, Thomas
Nootenboom, Christopher
Polasky, Stephen
author_sort Johnson, Justin Andrew
title The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways
title_short The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways
title_full The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways
title_fullStr The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways
title_full_unstemmed The Economic Case for Nature : A Global Earth-Economy Model to Assess Development Policy Pathways
title_sort economic case for nature : a global earth-economy model to assess development policy pathways
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/445311625065610639/A-Global-Earth-Economy-Model-to-Assess-Development-Policy-Pathways
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35882
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