Articles producció científica> Economia

Rising inequality: A material perspective on the Great Recession in the European Union

  • Dades identificatives

    Identificador: imarina:9389455
    Autors:
    Schaffartzik, AnkeDuro, Juan Antonio
    Resum:
    The 2007/8 economic crisis and the global Great Recession led to widespread turmoil and instability. In Europe, unprecedented reductions in per capita resource use were crisis-driven rather than the result of deliberate policies. This study examines material use patterns in the EU-27 from 2000 to 2020, covering the period before and the onset of the Great Recession. We find that average material consumption in Europe decreased and has since stagnated, although this trend is uneven, with growing underlying inequalities, as measured using the Theil index of metabolic rates. The patterns in construction materials especially shape overall resource use trajectories. The role of infrastructure and services provisioning, especially where these are fossil-fueled, emerges as key in understanding these patterns. Geographic groupings of EU member states-Northern, Eastern, Mediterranean, and Central-further explain the inequalities that deepened following the recession. These emerging disparities raise important questions about what underpins the European project in a Union in which growth or sustained wealth in some member states systematically coincides with what can only be described as collapse elsewhere.
  • Altres:

    Autor segons l'article: Schaffartzik, Anke; Duro, Juan Antonio
    Departament: Economia
    Autor/s de la URV: Duro Moreno, Juan Antonio
    Paraules clau: Theil index Theil inde Metabolism Metabolic rate Material accounting Lif Inequality Eu-27 Emissions Economic-crisis Economic crisis Determinants
    Resum: The 2007/8 economic crisis and the global Great Recession led to widespread turmoil and instability. In Europe, unprecedented reductions in per capita resource use were crisis-driven rather than the result of deliberate policies. This study examines material use patterns in the EU-27 from 2000 to 2020, covering the period before and the onset of the Great Recession. We find that average material consumption in Europe decreased and has since stagnated, although this trend is uneven, with growing underlying inequalities, as measured using the Theil index of metabolic rates. The patterns in construction materials especially shape overall resource use trajectories. The role of infrastructure and services provisioning, especially where these are fossil-fueled, emerges as key in understanding these patterns. Geographic groupings of EU member states-Northern, Eastern, Mediterranean, and Central-further explain the inequalities that deepened following the recession. These emerging disparities raise important questions about what underpins the European project in a Union in which growth or sustained wealth in some member states systematically coincides with what can only be described as collapse elsewhere.
    Àrees temàtiques: Zootecnia / recursos pesqueiros Sociología Serviço social Saúde coletiva Interdisciplinar Geociências General o multidisciplinar General environmental science Environmental studies Environmental sciences Environmental science (miscellaneous) Environmental science (all) Engenharias iii Economics and econometrics Economics Economia Ecology Ciencias sociales Ciências biológicas i Ciências ambientais Ciências agrárias i Ciência de alimentos Biodiversidade
    Accès a la llicència d'ús: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
    Adreça de correu electrònic de l'autor: juanantonio.duro@urv.cat
    Identificador de l'autor: 0000-0002-1106-5251
    Data d'alta del registre: 2025-03-15
    Versió de l'article dipositat: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
    URL Document de llicència: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
    Referència a l'article segons font original: Ecological Economics. 227 108417-
    Referència de l'ítem segons les normes APA: Schaffartzik, Anke; Duro, Juan Antonio (2025). Rising inequality: A material perspective on the Great Recession in the European Union. Ecological Economics, 227(), 108417-. DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2024.108417
    Entitat: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
    Any de publicació de la revista: 2025
    Tipus de publicació: Journal Publications
  • Paraules clau:

    Ecology,Economics,Economics and Econometrics,Environmental Science (Miscellaneous),Environmental Sciences,Environmental Studies
    Theil index
    Theil inde
    Metabolism
    Metabolic rate
    Material accounting
    Lif
    Inequality
    Eu-27
    Emissions
    Economic-crisis
    Economic crisis
    Determinants
    Zootecnia / recursos pesqueiros
    Sociología
    Serviço social
    Saúde coletiva
    Interdisciplinar
    Geociências
    General o multidisciplinar
    General environmental science
    Environmental studies
    Environmental sciences
    Environmental science (miscellaneous)
    Environmental science (all)
    Engenharias iii
    Economics and econometrics
    Economics
    Economia
    Ecology
    Ciencias sociales
    Ciências biológicas i
    Ciências ambientais
    Ciências agrárias i
    Ciência de alimentos
    Biodiversidade
  • Documents:

  • Cerca a google

    Search to google scholar