People wade through floodwaters in Jakarta's central business district in 2013. © Ed Wray/Getty

The Costs of Growth

May 16, 2024

We are thrilled to feature in The Ideas Letter 16 the trenchant prose of Oliver Eagleton, an editor at Sidecar, who dissects the intra-left debate around degrowth. Eagleton makes clear that the contest is indeed over development and its limits. But there are greater stakes as well. We also spotlight an illuminating interview of the superstar political economist Branko Milanović by the equally esteemed Mexican journalist Carlos Bravo Regidor, on Milanović’s fave themes: inequality and capitalism. Read and learn!

For our curated links, we begin with a piece Ivan Krastev and I wrote for Foreign Policy. Can democracy recover a productive tension between a near future and a distant and utopian future despite the raft of colossal problems that require immediate attention today? This is followed by a look at democracy’s antipode, authoritarianism, and a fascinating (and necessary) podcast with Northwestern political scientist Ida Zing that helps to reconceptualize China’s behavior. Two other podcasts discuss the contradictions of climate politics. The final one will challenge your assumptions about the environment as well.

Our musical selection this issue was recommended by a special gentleman, now residing in Iowa, Felix Benardo. Felix turned me on to this vital mid-1970s Zambian band, Amanaz (the genre is Zamrock). Enjoy “Sunday Morning” from Amanaz’s sole recording: Africa. The name Amanaz, you should know, is an acronym for “Ask Me About Nice Artistes in Zambia.” Thank you, Felix!

—Leonard Benardo, senior vice president at the Open Society Foundations