Can We Have Our Cake and Eat It? A Review of the Debate on Green Recovery from the COVID-19 Crisis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
4.1. Resilience
4.2. Behavior Shift
4.3. Human Capital
4.4. Models of Growth
4.5. Inclusivity
5. Conclusions and Discussion
5.1. Debate Summary
5.2. Knowledge Contribution
5.3. Concluding Remarks
5.4. Study Limitations and Recommendations for Future Work
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Source | Resilience | Behavior Shift | Human Capital | Models of Growth | Inclusivity |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[3] | |||||
[4] | |||||
[5] | |||||
[40] | |||||
[41] | |||||
[42] | |||||
[43] | |||||
[44] | |||||
[45] | |||||
[46] | |||||
[47] | |||||
[48] | |||||
[49] | |||||
[50] | |||||
[51] | |||||
[52] |
Causal Link | Polarity | Reference |
---|---|---|
Likelihood of environmental shocks -> Socioeconomic damages from environmental shocks | + | [3,4,46] |
Socioeconomic damages from environmental shocks -> Economic performance | − | [3,5,40,41,44] |
Economic performance -> Investment in ESG reporting | + | [3,42,46,47] |
Investment in ESG reporting -> Use of ESG-based decision making | + | [42,46] |
Use of ESG-based decision making -> Resilience to environmental shock | + | [42,44,46,48] |
Resilience to environmental shock -> Socioeconomic damages from environmental shock | + | [3,5,40,41,44] |
Use of ESG-based decision making -> Ecological footprint | − | [42,46] |
Ecological footprint -> Likelihood of environmental shocks | + | [3,4] |
Use of ESG-based decision making -> Economic performance | − | [42,46] |
Economic prosperity -> Duration of support packages | − | [3,40,41] |
Duration of support packages -> Unemployment | − | [40,41] |
Unemployment -> Economic prosperity | − | [5,40,41,42,50] |
Duration of support packages -> Debt | + | [41,51] |
Debt -> Gap between desired and actual GDP growth | + | [40,50] |
Gap between desired and actual GDP -> Economic prosperity | − | [40,50] |
Duration of support packages -> Uncertainty regarding post-COVID-19 demand shifts | + | [41,45,47,50] |
Uncertainty regarding post-COVID-19 demand shifts -> Economic consumption | − | [4,41,47,50] |
Economic consumption -> Economic prosperity | + | [40,46,47] |
Average business profitability -> Unemployment | − | [5,40,41,50] |
Unemployment -> Average business profitability | − | [5,40,41,42,50] |
Average business profitability -> Productivity | + | [40,43] |
Productivity -> Average business profitability | + | [40,42,43] |
Average business profitability -> Worker support measures | − | [3,40,41] |
Worker support measures -> Productivity | − | [40,41,50] |
Worker support measures -> Unemployment | − | [40,41] |
Unemployment -> Access to skills and network | − | [40,47,50] |
Access to skills and network -> Unemployment | − | [42,47,50] |
Access to skills and network -> Productivity | + | [42,50] |
Training and retraining schemes -> Unemployment | − | [42,46,50] |
Training and retraining schemes -> Access to skills and network | + | [42,46,50] |
Training and retraining schemes -> Productivity | + | [42,43,46,50] |
Public investment -> Research activities | + | [40,42] |
Research activities -> Innovation commercialization activities | + | [40,42] |
Innovation commercialization activities -> Economic growth | + | [40,42] |
Economic growth -> Financial resources | + | [43,45,46,49,50] |
Financial resources -> Public investment | + | [40,41,42,52] |
Public investment -> Infrastructure development | + | [42,43,45,46] |
Infrastructure development -> Economic growth | + | [42,43,44,45,49] |
Public investment > Certainty regarding public policy | + | [5,41] |
Certainty regarding public policy -> Private investment | + | [5,51] |
Private investment -> Research activities | + | [40,42] |
Private investment -> Infrastructure development | + | [42,43,45,49] |
Financial resources -> Private investment | + | [40,42] |
Financial resources -> Willingness to shift to sustainable activities | − | [5,51] |
Willingness to shift to sustainable activities -> Number of running sustainability projects | + | [3,51] |
Number of running sustainability projects -> Natural resource quality | + | [3,42,44,51] |
Natural resource quality -> Economic growth | + | [3,44,51] |
Unequal economic prosperity -> Unequal access to resources | + | [40,42,50] |
Unequal access to resources -> Unequal economic prosperity | + | [41,48,52] |
Unequal economic prosperity -> Pace of economic recovery | − | [5,41] |
Pace of economic recovery -> Economic output | + | [41,44,46,49] |
Economic output -> Support measures | − | [3,40,41] |
Support measures -> Unequal economic prosperity | + | [41,47] |
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Process | Model-Based Deduction | Text-Based Induction |
---|---|---|
Step 1 | Code model feedback loops to themes | Create statements based on themes |
Step 2 | Aggregate causal arguments | Induce document position on statements |
Output | Causal loop diagrams | Tables of document positions |
Statement | Agreement | Disagreement | Not Discussed |
---|---|---|---|
There should be focus on building resilience to future shocks | [3,5,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48] | N/A | [4,49,50,51,52] |
Shorter supply chains have a positive effect on economic resilience | [3,40,44,48,50] | [41,45] | [4,5,42,46,47,49,51,52,53] |
Statement | Agreement | Disagreement | Not Discussed |
---|---|---|---|
Post-COVID-19 consumer behavior shift is uncertain | [3,4,44,48,49,50,51] | [42] | [5,40,41,43,45,46,47,48,52] |
Statement | Agreement | Disagreement | Not Discussed |
---|---|---|---|
Green recovery will create jobs, possibly more than quick rebound | [3,5,43,44,45,51] | N/A | [4,40,41,42,46,47,48,49,50,52] |
The crisis has a negative effect on productivity, which is difficult to overcome in the future | [41,50] | [3,40,43,44,45] | [4,5,42,46,47,48,49,51,52] |
Investment in human capital is key to economic recovery | [3,41,42,44,46,47,48,50,51] | N/A | [4,5,40,43,45,49,52] |
Statement | Agreement | Disagreement | Not Discussed |
---|---|---|---|
Investment in innovation is important for economic recovery | [3,5,40,42,44,46,51] | N/A | [4,41,43,45,46,47,48,49,52] |
Recovery should be focused on wellbeing metrics rather than GDP | [3,42,46,47] | N/A | [4,5,40,41,43,44,45,48,49,50,51,52] |
Anticipated post-COVID GDP development will be the same or worse than pre-COVID GDP | [4,41,42,43] | [40,44,45] | [3,5,42,46,47,48,49,51,52] |
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Gusheva, E.; de Gooyert, V. Can We Have Our Cake and Eat It? A Review of the Debate on Green Recovery from the COVID-19 Crisis. Sustainability 2021, 13, 874. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020874
Gusheva E, de Gooyert V. Can We Have Our Cake and Eat It? A Review of the Debate on Green Recovery from the COVID-19 Crisis. Sustainability. 2021; 13(2):874. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020874
Chicago/Turabian StyleGusheva, Ema, and Vincent de Gooyert. 2021. "Can We Have Our Cake and Eat It? A Review of the Debate on Green Recovery from the COVID-19 Crisis" Sustainability 13, no. 2: 874. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020874
APA StyleGusheva, E., & de Gooyert, V. (2021). Can We Have Our Cake and Eat It? A Review of the Debate on Green Recovery from the COVID-19 Crisis. Sustainability, 13(2), 874. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020874