New publication on the Specter of Growth in Doughnut Economics

The Doughnut Diagram1

At the end of 2024, Benedikt Schmid published a paper on the role that economic growth has taken in shaping the implementation of Doughnut economics in two small municipalities: Tomelilla and Bad Nauheim.  

Doughnut Economics presents a straightforward vision: shifting the goal of economic practice towards achieving a good life for all within planetary boundaries. This basic premise is one that many decision-makers, administrative staff, and members of civil society find intuitive and thus have begun integrating the Doughnut model into their work. What makes this resonance remarkable is that the traditional objective of economic growth becomes irrelevant for Doughnut Economics: The approach is agnostic to growth while it aims to recalibrate economic practice to avoid both ecological overshoot and social shortfall.

This paper explores if and how the real-work application of Doughnut Economics’ principles and tools reduces the emphasis on growth in local development. Together with the staff members leading this work in both cities, we traced the ups and downs, successes and failures, strategies, and tactics of implementing Doughnut Economics. Their accomplishments within a short period were remarkable: Tomelilla’s largest investment in decades—a new school—is on track to be developed based on Doughnut principles. Bad Nauheim conducted a public participation process that incorporated Doughnut Economics at various stages to design specific sustainability measures. And these are just the most prominent examples.

However, conversations with decision-makers and senior staff revealed that there isn’t one singular Doughnut model but many, most of which still incorporate an element of growth. The Doughnut visions in Tomelilla and Bad Nauheim were thus varied and not as straightforward in shifting economic goals as the framework conceptualized by Kate Raworth would suggest.

Three key aspects emerged that made working with the Doughnut both versatile (to frame it positively) and challenging (from a growth-critical perspective). First, the concept of growth itself is ambiguous and unclear to many. With multiple meanings and connotations coexisting, the objective of GDP growth often reemerges in discussions and visions. Second, as a result, growth reinserts itself into the Doughnut framework—sometimes as a socio-economic foundation—thereby remaining a legitimate goal. Third, and perhaps most significantly, existing dependencies on economic growth continue to challenge municipal leaders and employees. Concerns about recession are well-founded but often accepted as a given rather than questioned.

As evident, growth remains too entrenched to be simply ignored. Recognizing the strategic importance of delicate communication around the Doughnut, the paper suggests a series of steps towards a deeper commitment to overcoming growth-based development. It proposes framing this around a ‘secularization’ of growth: subjecting it to empirical scrutiny to help dispel the ‘almost religious’ reverence surrounding growth (Raworth, 2017: 245)2 rather than contenting with now knowing (i.e. growth agnosticism). To steer practical engagements with Doughnut Economics toward post-growth, it is crucial to create pathways for making growth a subject of everyday urban politics, challenging its deep entrenchment as a naturalized necessity.

You can find the publication here.

  1. https://doughnuteconomics.org/tools/doughnut-diagrams-in-25-languages (This tool is licensed under a Creative Commons BY SA 4.0 license) ↩︎
  2. Raworth K (2017) Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think like a 21st-Century Economist. London: Random House Business Books. ↩︎