The growth paradox, sustainable development, and business strategy

被引:49
作者
Edwards, Mark G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Jonkoping Univ, Jonkoping Int Business Sch, Media Management & Transformat Ctr, Jonkoping, Sweden
关键词
business strategy; degrowth; growth paradox; growth typology; metatheoretical research; social– ecological system; sustainability; transformation; CORPORATE SUSTAINABILITY; MANAGEMENT; INNOVATION; MODEL; DEGROWTH; PERFORMANCE; TECHNOLOGY; TRANSITION; KNOWLEDGE; LIMITS;
D O I
10.1002/bse.2790
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Economic growth is a two-edged sword. Expanding economies and industries create wealth and employment, but global economic expansion is having unprecedented deleterious impacts on vital planetary systems. Despite this, the core strategic goal of all economies and many businesses continues to be the pursuit of ongoing economic growth. To resolve this paradox, a reconceptualization of firm-level growth is presented. I describe and discuss the organizational characteristics of the growth paradox and follow this with a metatheoretical review of economic, organizational, and ecological perspectives on growth. From this review, a typology of firm-level strategy is developed that radically reconceptualizes business growth as developmental activity primarily concerned with social-ecological flourishing. The features of this typology and its implications for business strategy are discussed according to three principles that emerged from the analysis: multidexterity, resilience thinking for design, and inclusive balance (embeddedness). Together, these strategy principles form the prerequisite management competencies needed for the development, implementation, and evaluation of sustainable business strategies. Transformative firm-level responses to the growth paradox are needed if sustaining forms of organizational growth are to be achieved and this paper presents a novel integrative framework for informing those strategies.
引用
收藏
页码:3079 / 3094
页数:16
相关论文
共 104 条
[51]  
Jackson T., 2009, PROSPERITY GROWTH, DOI [10.4324/9781849774338, DOI 10.4324/9781849774338]
[52]   The Transition to a Sustainable Prosperity-A Stock-Flow-Consistent Ecological Macroeconomic Model for Canada [J].
Jackson, Tim ;
Victor, Peter A. .
ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2020, 177
[53]   NAVIGATING PARADOX AS A MECHANISM OF CHANGE AND INNOVATION IN HYBRID ORGANIZATIONS [J].
Jay, Jason .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2013, 56 (01) :137-159
[54]   Degrowth and Technology: Towards feasible, viable, appropriate and convivial imaginaries [J].
Kerschner, Christian ;
Waechter, Petra ;
Nierling, Linda ;
Ehlers, Melf-Hinrich .
JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2018, 197 :1619-1636
[55]   Economic de-growth vs. steady-state economy [J].
Kerschner, Christian .
JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2010, 18 (06) :544-551
[56]   Insider perspectives on growth: Implications for a nondichotomous understanding of 'sustainable' and conventional entrepreneurship [J].
Klapper, Rita G. ;
Upham, Paul ;
Blundel, Richard K. .
BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 30 (03) :1481-1496
[57]   Institutionalizing alternative economic spaces? An interpretivist perspective on diverse economies [J].
Krueger, Robert ;
Schulz, Christian ;
Gibbs, David C. .
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY, 2018, 42 (04) :569-589
[58]   Stages of Corporate Sustainability: Integrating the Strong Sustainability Worldview [J].
Landrum, Nancy E. .
ORGANIZATION & ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 31 (04) :287-313
[59]   Identifying Worldviews on Corporate Sustainability: A Content Analysis of Corporate Sustainability Reports [J].
Landrum, Nancy E. ;
Ohsowski, Brian .
BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 27 (01) :128-151
[60]   Going green, going clean: Lean-green sustainability strategy and firm growth [J].
Lartey, Theophilus ;
Yirenkyi, Diana Owusu ;
Adomako, Samuel ;
Danso, Albert ;
Amankwah-Amoah, Joseph ;
Alam, Ashraful .
BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 29 (01) :118-139