
from WILD to CLIC™.
Today, we live in an economy that is characterised by value destruction. It is wildly unsustainable in the way people consume, produce, and organise their lives. We call this Wasteful, Idle, Lopsided and Dirty economy the WILD economy. At Lombard Odier, we believe the economy is already transitioning towards an economic model that is geared towards sustainability, social justice and responsible stewardship of the environment. The vision for that future is clear. It is an economy that is Circular, Lean, Inclusive and Clean and is radically different from where we are today. We call this the CLIC™ economy.
We believe our fiduciary duty is to help our clients mitigate the risks and capture the investment opportunities associated with this transition towards a CLIC™ economy.
Source: LOIM. For illustrative purposes only
Our economy must transform to one that is circular, lean, inclusive and clean (CLIC™).
We believe the current global economic model has only scratched the surface of its potential. The transition to a circular economy, with the closing of societal gaps, investment in natural capital and the societal benefits of a cleaner economy should unlock trillions in untapped value. And the opportunities for sustainable growth are massive: unrecycled e-waste contains 17 times the amount of gold as raw gold ore; USD 4.5 trillion in assets currently sit idle and are ripe for exploitation through a more sharing-orientated economy; modest action on gender parity could add USD 12 trillion to the global economy by 2025; and renewable energy often costs less than traditional fossil fuels.
Today’s economy is wasteful, idle, lopsided and dirty (WILD).
Today, we extract nearly 265,000 times the weight of the Empire State Building in new resources every year according to our analysis; gender and racial gaps limit economic fulfilment; and fossil fuels’ impact on air pollution, health and natural capital act as a drag on growth. This economic model is based on the destruction of value and is perpetuated through underinvestment in natural, regenerative systems, the discarding of products and materials before they exhaust their economic life and the failure to account for the true social cost of high emitting industries. This model has run its course.