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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Physical Economy of France (1830–2015). The History of a Parasite?
Gaëtan LevillainThomas Le RouxGuillaume NobletMargot LyauteyNelo MagalhãesJean-baptiste FressozFrançois JarrigeChristophe Bonneuilsubject
Economics and Econometrics010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesbusiness.industryNatural resource economicsMaterial consumptionMaterial flow analysisFossil fuel010501 environmental sciencesCapitalism[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance01 natural sciences[SHS]Humanities and Social SciencesIndustrialisation[SHS.ENVIR]Humanities and Social Sciences/Environmental studiesEconomicsPer capitaPeriod (geology)Environmental history[SHS.HIST]Humanities and Social Sciences/HistorybusinessComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental Sciencedescription
Abstract This article explores long-term trends and patterns of material use in France for a 185-year period. It is the first long-term study of material flows for France with national and yearly data for most of the period. Based on a material flow analysis (MFA) that is fully consistent with current standards of economy-wide MFAs and covers domestic extraction, imports, and exports of materials, we investigated the evolution of the French metabolism from industrialization to financialized capitalism. Over the whole period, there is a 9-fold increase in domestic material consumption, an expansion of material use per capita, and a spectacular addition of abiotic resources (fossil fuels and minerals) to biotic materials. Using a world-ecology framework, we exhibit a specific metabolic path: that of a state benefiting from successive world-systems for its economic development through massive material imports.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-03-01 | Ecological Economics |