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CONCEPT

Growth Agnosticism

Raworth's seventh principle — a stance of genuine indifference to whether an economy grows, stabilizes, or contracts, grounded in the recognition that what matters is not the size of the economy but whether it keeps humanity within the doughnut's safe and just space.

Growth agnosticism is the most uncomfortable of Raworth's seven shifts for mainstream economic thought because it severs the default link between economic success and economic expansion. A growth-agnostic economy does not pursue growth as an objective. It does not resist growth as a matter of principle. It is genuinely indifferent to whether the economy grows, stabilizes, or contracts, because it measures success by a different variable entirely: whether people are thriving within planetary boundaries.

Growth Agnosticism
Growth Agnosticism

In The You On AI Encyclopedia

The distinction between growth-addicted and growth-agnostic is the load-bearing move. Growth is a phenomenon — a measurable increase in economic output. Growth addiction is a dependency — the structural inability of an economic system to function without continuous expansion. An economy can be healthy while growing, healthy while stable, or healthy while contracting, depending on whether the activity within it meets human needs within planetary boundaries. What an economy cannot be is healthy while addicted — while its institutions, incentive structures, and measurement systems are calibrated to a single variable (GDP growth) that tells you nothing about whether people are thriving or the planet is sustaining.

Applied to AI, growth agnosticism generates questions the industry does not ask. When Segal describes the twenty-fold productivity multiplier, the growth-agnostic response is not "Wonderful!" or "Terrible!" but "What was produced, and did it help anyone above the social foundation?" A twenty-fold multiplier is a twenty-fold multiplier whether it produces a diagnostic tool for rural clinics in Malawi or the fifteenth competing project management application for affluent knowledge workers. Growth-addicted metrics treat these as equivalent. The doughnut insists they are not.

Doughnut Economics
Doughnut Economics

The most provocative implication concerns value itself. In growth-addicted economics, value is measured by market price — willingness of buyers to pay. In doughnut economics, value is measured by contribution to thriving — the degree to which an activity advances the social foundation and respects the ecological ceiling. These two measures can diverge radically. A product with high market price and no social-foundation impact has high growth-economic value and zero doughnut value. An open-source educational tool, a community health application, a public-domain agricultural resource can have zero market price and enormous doughnut value.

AI, with its capacity to reduce production costs toward zero, makes this divergence acute. When the cost of building software approaches nothing, the market price approaches nothing — as the Software Death Cross demonstrates. But the doughnut value of software built for social-foundation purposes does not approach nothing. It may increase, because the tools are now available to address needs that were previously too expensive to serve.

Origin

Raworth's growth agnosticism builds on a lineage that includes Herman Daly's steady-state economics, Tim Jackson's prosperity-without-growth framework, and the ecological economics tradition. Her distinctive move is agnosticism rather than opposition: she does not advocate against growth; she advocates indifference to growth as a variable, replacing it with the doughnut as the measure that matters.

Key Ideas

Addiction vs. phenomenon. Growth itself is neutral; growth addiction is the pathology that must be dissolved.

Enough
Enough

Direction over magnitude. What matters is whether economic activity advances the doughnut, not whether total output is rising.

Price-value divergence. Market price and doughnut value can point in opposite directions; AI makes the divergence structural.

The missing concept of enough. Growth-addicted frameworks have no vocabulary for sufficiency; the doughnut supplies it.

Debates & Critiques

The sharpest debate concerns whether growth agnosticism is politically feasible in economies whose institutions — pensions, debt service, employment — are calibrated to continuous expansion. Critics argue that any non-growth equilibrium would trigger a cascade of defaults and unemployment. Raworth's response is that the calibration is a design choice, not a physical constraint, and that redesigning institutions for growth-agnostic stability is the central economic project of the century.

Further Reading

  1. Kate Raworth, Doughnut Economics (2017), Chapter 7
  2. Tim Jackson, Prosperity Without Growth (2017)
  3. Herman Daly, Beyond Growth (1996)
  4. Jason Hickel, Less Is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World (2020)
  5. Giorgos Kallis, Degrowth (2018)

Three Positions on Growth Agnosticism

From Chapter 15 — how the Boulder, the Believer, and the Beaver each read this concept
Boulder · Refusal
Han's diagnosis
The Boulder sees in Growth Agnosticism evidence of the pathology — that refusal, not adaptation, is the correct posture. The garden, the analog life, the smartphone that is not bought.
Believer · Flow
Riding the current
The Believer sees Growth Agnosticism as the river's direction — lean in. Trust that the technium, as Kevin Kelly argues, wants what life wants. Resistance is fear, not wisdom.
Beaver · Stewardship
Building dams
The Beaver sees Growth Agnosticism as an opportunity for construction. Neither refuse nor surrender — build the institutional, attentional, and craft governors that shape the river around the things worth preserving.

Read Chapter 15 in the book →

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