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Absolute income mobility and the effect of parent generation inequality: An extended decomposition approach
Liss, E., Korpi, M., & Wennberg, K.
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No evidence of counteracting policy effects on European solar power invention and diffusion
Grafström, J., & Poudineh, R.
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About

  • About us

    • About
    • Contact us
  • Media

    • News archive
  • Cooperations

    • Eli F. Heckscher Lectures

Research

  • Areas

    • Labour Market Research
    • Competitiveness Research
    • Climate and Environmental Research
  • Ongoing research

    • Working Paper Series
  • People
  • Publications

    • Publications

      • Publications

    Barriers to circularity in the metals industry: an analytical framework of feedback and lock-in effects

    PublicationArticle (with peer review)
    Circular economy
    Barriers to circularity in the metals industry: an analytical framework of feedback and lock-in effects
    Download

    Abstract

    The metals sector faces multiple and interconnected barriers to achieving circularity. This study examines steel, aluminum, and copper to illustrate how challenges vary between metals. While copper can often be recycled without quality loss, steel and aluminum face alloy-related limitations that drive downcycling and quality degradation. Using a matrix-based analytical framework, the study maps the interactions between economic, technological, institutional, and social constraints, distinguishing between primary drivers, secondary effects, feedback loops, and lock-in mechanisms. The results show strong reinforcing links between economic, technological, and institutional domains, with social factors playing a more indirect role. These findings align with observed industry patterns while adding a structured, quantitative perspective. By clarifying how different barriers combine and reinforce one another, the analysis identifies priority areas for intervention to advance metals recycling and support the transition toward a more circular economy.

    Grafström, J., Poelzer, G., & Pettersson, J. (2025). Barriers to circularity in the metals industry: An analytical framework of feedback and lock-in effects. Mineral Economics. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13563-025-00540-8

    Details

    Author

    Grafström, J., Poelzer, G., & Pettersson, J.

    Publication year

    2025

    Published in

    Mineral Economics.

    Related

    Jonas Grafström
    Ph.D. and vice CEO

    +46703475854

    jonas.grafstrom@ratio.se


    Similar content

    Breaking Circular Economy Barriers
    Article (with peer review)Publication
    Grafström, J. & Aasma, S.
    Publication year

    2021

    Published in

    Journal of Cleaner Production

    Abstract

    Despite high estimated gains of a circular economy implementation, progress on the macro, meso and micro level is sluggish. The purpose of this paper is to examine, from a theoretical economics perspective, how four barriers – technological, market, institutional and cultural – can prevent the implementation of a circular economy. The barriers that currently hinder a circular economy from developing are identified and a mapping of these barriers is performed to understand how they are interdependent and entangled. The conclusion is that even small barriers could stop the emergence of a circular economy. Even though a circular economy is different from our traditional “linear” economy, the theoretical analysis in this paper gives no reason to believe that a circular economy will not follow the same rules as a traditional economy. There will be property rights, rule of law and price signals guiding the economy. If some of the essential parts of a market are lacking, a weaker circular economy than otherwise possible will materialize.

    Ratio Working Paper No. 338 Breaking Circular Economy Barriers
    Working paperPublication
    Grafström, J. & Aasma, S.
    Download
    Publication year

    2020

    Published in

    Ratio Working Paper

    Abstract

    Despite high estimated economic gains the implementation of a circular economy (CE) in most areas is generally slow. The purpose of this paper is therefore to examine the potential causes to this sluggish implementation and to discuss and illustrate how different types of barriers (technological, market, institutional and cultural) can prevent the further implementation of a CE. We conduct a systematic literature review where academic articles and “grey literature” on the barriers to a CE transition are analysed and classified into technological, market/economic, institutional/regulatory, and cultural/social barriers. We approach the research problem in a twofold way. Firstly, we recognize the barriers that currently seem to hinder a CE from developing. Secondly, we map these barriers to better understand how they are interdependent and entangled. Our main conclusion is that even small barriers can stop the emergence of a CE.

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