Is sustainable economic and social development possible? A critical note on the “value” of the SDGs
This article analyses the connection that scientific economics has made between economic development and social sustainability. Starting from the classical idea of value in capitalism, the article reviews the main contributions that classical, neoclassical, heterodox and modern economic syntheses have made on the possibility of a socially sustainable economic development. From this review, the need to build a new sustainable value economy is identified and its main dimensions are analysed, especially the role that firms, markets and government should play. In our research on the fit between new sustainable ways of generating value and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the results obtained are unfavourable. The SDGs must substantially modify their approach and methodology to move towards a more socially sustainable economic value.
ODS
Full Professor of Economics at the Faculty of Economics and Business Studies of the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC). Director of the interdisciplinary research group on ICT, i2TIC (https://i2tic.research.uoc.edu/en/). Specialist in the economic analysis of digital transformation and knowledge economy, a subject on which he has published 65 books and book chapters, and 115 articles in indexed research and dissemination journals.