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'Doughnut Economics' shows how global growth is out of balance—and how we can fix it

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A new update to an influential economic theory called "Doughnut Economics" shows a global economy on a collision course with nature.

The by Kate Raworth, "Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st Century Economist," was first published in 2017. It was lauded for its ability to convey the complexity of global social and environmental issues in a single, easy-to-understand diagram.

The doughnut shape represents the safe and just operating space for humanity.

The hole at the center of the doughnut represents a shortfall in the social foundations necessary for people to live safe and just lives.

The area outside the doughnut shows ecological overshoot across a range of domains, such as , biodiversity loss and ocean acidification.

Now, Andrew Fanning and Kate Raworth have published the first update to the Doughnut Economics framework since 2017 .

The update should prompt us to ask serious questions about our society, economy and notions of progress.

A global movement

Since the book was published, doughnut economics has evolved into something of a global movement, at the center of which is the Doughnut Economics Action Lab (DEAL). Many places, , are using the framework to assess their social and ecological condition and trajectory.

Doughnut economic thinking also aligns with Australian First Nations' view of Country—the economy, society and environment all as a single, inseparable thing. An Indigenous consultancy, Dinadj, is working to develop an .

The original global doughnut portrait was a static picture at a single point in time. The turns this into an annual time series spanning from 2000 to 2022. This means we can now monitor trends in global social and ecological health over time.

What these trends show is alarming.

While global gross domestic product (GDP) has more than doubled, progress on meeting social foundations has slowed and ecological overshoot has accelerated. In other words, we are damaging critical biophysical processes at a faster rate than we're improving people's lives.

The update shows an overshoot on six of the nine critical global planetary boundaries. Separate indicates we've since crossed a seventh boundary, ocean acidification.

'Doughnut economics' shows how global growth is out of balance—and how we can fix it
Raworth’s conceptual doughnut. Credit: ,

Rich nations dominate the damage to the environment

The other important change in this update is the breakdown of data by nation, allowing comparison between groups of countries. This illustrates the unequal nature of economic development and the trade-off between social foundations and ecological overshoot that the current economic system creates.

The richest 20% of nations, home to 15% of the global population, are responsible for 44% of the global ecological overshoot (going beyond the safe space for humanity). But they have only a 2% share of the shortfall in social foundations, in areas such as food insecurity, health and education.

Meanwhile, the poorest 40% of countries, with 43% of the population, account for only 4% of the ecological overshoot but 63% of the social shortfall.

While progress has been made across a range of social domains, shortfalls remain alarming. About 75% of the global population say they perceive widespread corruption in government and business. Some indicators are going backwards, most notably a rise in autocratic regimes and food security.

What does progress really mean?

The updated doughnut framework adds to the weight of evidence that the dominant economic narrative—which equates with progress—is leading us towards multiple environmental crises. And it's falling short on delivering social progress.

In Australia, a recently released report, from the Productivity Commission, is a clear illustration of this disconnect between economic goals and social and environmental health.

The commission chair, Danielle Wood, told : "Governments must bake in the process of asking themselves: what have you done for growth today?"

Tellingly, the report barely touches on poverty, inequality, biodiversity or the environment. It makes no mention of the impact that growth (particularly from rich countries like Australia) is having on critical planetary boundaries.

However, there are many initiatives emerging from governments, businesses and civil society around the world and in Australia that reflect the need for different definitions of progress.

At the national level, we have . This framework was developed by Treasury at the request of Treasurer Jim Chalmers and "will towards a more healthy, secure, sustainable, cohesive and prosperous Australia."

The Australian Capital Territory has a that provides a holistic guide to government decision-making. Every state government is also engaging with these questions, with an explicit well-being focus in , , and .

It's early days for all of these government initiatives, but it's a good sign so many are starting to take these challenges seriously.

The was adapted for Australia by community organization Regen Melbourne and featured as one of two examples in the Nature article. It confirms our place in the global distribution with relatively low levels of social deprivation and very high levels of ecological overshoot.

The economics image illustrates with great clarity the complex challenges faced by human society in the 21st century.

The recent update shows it's more important than ever that we think carefully about what progress means and we repurpose our economy away from its destructive focus on growth at all costs and towards human and environmental flourishing.

More information: Andrew L. Fanning et al, Doughnut of social and planetary boundaries monitors a world out of balance, Nature (2025).

Journal information: Nature

Provided by The Conversation

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