Ocean/atmosphere/biosphere model tuned for interactive economics-based simulations from Y2k on.
This Scenario has Affluence decreasing due to Anthropogenic climate change
Final Project 3 W/ Socio-Economic Factors - Temperature Degradation
WIP Summary of Miller 2015 PCD
article for the Compelling Case for Prevention Project Scoping Study.
See also economic view IM 69774 (private)
Simplified at IM-70351 Tool
Prevention Investment Framework
Farmers use intensive pesticides to harvest cotton, which is harmful to not only the health of the farmers using them, but also our environment as it pollutes rivers and groundwater that negatively interfere with the ecosystem. Even though these farmers know of the health and environmental risks, they still use harmful pesticides to produce cotton, but why is this so. This stock and flow map should explain what impacts farmers to use pesticides to grow cotton despite the risks and explain the cause and effect relationship their use has on the cotton industry and the environment.
According to Clevo Wilson and Clem Tisdell article, "Why farmer continue to use pesticides despite environmental, health and sustainable costs,"
Pesticide use by farmers:
- "used to reduce yield losses to pests"
- "avoid economic losses to ensure economical survival"
- "increase supply market and reduce market prices"
- "ignorance of sustainable use"
- "integral part of commercially grow high yielding varieties so without use, high yields may not be sustained"
- "damage to agriculture land from the use occurs over long period of time so costs may not look serious short term, but reduces economic welfare in long term"
- "environmental damage: pollutes rivers and groundwater, destroys beneficial predators and interferes with ecosystem overall"
- "health risks underestimated"
- "chemical companies selling it have incentive to push their use by advertising and promotion" (1,9).
Farmer Pesticide Use On Cotton
Systems Science CLD exercise 2024
How Pioneer Corn is Changing Farming in Ghana
Buying and storing electricity when it is cheap, and selling it when it is expensive. What are the benefits, both public and private?
Smart Grid: Electricity storage and variable energy pricing
Clone of Wagdy Samir Macroeconomics work in progress IM-901 Additions and deletions based on Robert Skidelsky's description of Keynes general THeory from his Biography Vol2 p 549 -571
Keynes General Theory
Capitalism vs Communism: Economic Simulation
Plan for CCP project completion see IM-102242 for WIP detail of the structures of the related models
CCP Project Scope Deliverables and Extensions
Simple causal loop diagram of a compound interest savings account.
Causal loop diagram of savings account
• This model examines how sustainable consumerism is from social, economic, and environmental aspects. The question in focus is "
How will our second-hand clothing donations affect communities in developing countries, specifically Kenya?"
5 Stock Variables:
• U.S. Consumers
• Multinational Corporations
• Overseas Factories
• Kenya
Highlight Findings:
To sum up, there are 4 major problems associated to donations:
• 1.
Source of problem is the consumer: Cheap deals attract hundreds of millions in revenue for fast fashion, and contribute to 100,000 tonnes of clothing to Kenya annually.
• 2. Rapid consumerism leads to over-utilization of slowly-renewable resources, such as water.
• 3. Nearly 96% of textiles jobs are eradicated by the massive inflow of clothing donations to Kenya.
• 4. The offshoring of textiles jobs enrages U.S. blue-collar workers, leading to the rise of protectionism.
Environmental, social, and economic sustainability aspects of textiles donations
Business Economic Sustainability
WIP Summary of Davies 2017 article from special Theory Culture and Society issue on Elites and Power after Financialization
Elite Power under Advanced Neoliberalism
Stage 5 World Premiere Economy and Fossil Fuels
The model is built to demonstrates how Burnie Tasmania can deal with a new COVID-19 outbreaks, taking government policies and economic effects into account.
The susceptible people are the local Burnie residents. If residents were infected, they would either recovered or dead. However, even they do recover, there is a chance that they will get infected again if immunity loss occurs.
From the simulation result we can see that with the implementation of local government policies including travel ban and social distancing, the number of infected people will decrease. The number of recovered people will increase in the first 5 weeks but then experience a decrease.
In addition, with the implementation of local government policy, the economic environment in Burnie will be relatively stable when the number of COVID-19 cases is stable.
How Burnie, Tasmania can deal with a new outbreak of COVID-19
This is an evolving attempt to illustrate the interconnected nature of the economic assets of Roswell - Chaves County
RCC economic model 1.1
Adapted from Hartmut Bossel's "System Zoo 3 Simulation Models, Economy, Society, Development."
Population model where the population is summarized in four age groups (children, parents, older people, old people). Used as a base population model for dealing with issues such as employment, care for the elderly, pensions dynamics, etc.
Z602 Population with four age groups
HANDY Model of Societal Collapse from Ecological Economics
Paper see also D Cunha's model at IM-15085 (Spanish)
Human and Nature Dynamics of Societal Inequality
Based on the SIR (Susceptible, Infected, Recovered) model of disease, this is an upgraded model with more specifc vaeriables.
Insights:
When the growth rate and the number of the recovered is much larger than deaths, the economic activity remain steady growing.
Model of COVID-19 outbreak in Burnie Tasmania
This model analyzes the interaction between climate change mitigation and adaptation in the land use sector using the concept of forest transition as a framework.
Forest Transition
This page provides a structural analysis of POTUS Candidate Hillary Clinton's
economic policy based on the information at: https://www.hillaryclinton.com/the-four-fights/economy-of-tomorrow/
The method used is Integrative
Propositional Analysis (IPA)
available:
http://scipolicy.org/uploads/3/4/6/9/3469675/wallis_white_paper_-_the_ipa_answer_2014.12.11.pdf
DRAFT IPA of Hillary Clinton Economic Policy
This page provides a structural analysis of POTUS Candidate Jim Gilmore's
economic policy based on the information at: http://www.gilmoreforamerica.com/jims-growth-code/ The method used is Integrative
Propositional Analysis (IPA)
available:
http://scipolicy.org/uploads/3/4/6/9/3469675/wallis_white_paper_-_the_ipa_answer_2014.12.11.pdf
DRAFT IPA of Jim Gilmore Economic Policy