Title: Forestry Economics
1Forestry Economics
- David Letson
- Marine Affairs/Economics
- University of Miami
2Opening
- A renewable resource.
- Balancing consumptive and capital uses
- Two sets of issues
- efficient allocation and
- counterexamples, e.g., deforestation.
3 Descriptive Stats
- 42 million acres of tropical forests cleared each
year, an area the size of Washington. - Half of timber harvested is for fuel.
- One-third of U.S. is covered by forests. 51 of
these lands are privately owned.
4Basic economics
- Many species are long-lived.
- Forests provide variety of products/ services
- Timber and non-timber values.
- Harvesting diminishes other types of value.
5Key economic concepts
- the Ramsey Rule
- analogous to Hotellings Rule
- MB of current harvest PV of future losses
- Equalize returns to consumptive and capital uses
- optimal rotation interval
- period between one cut and the next
- economically efficient rule vs biological
decision rule
6Biology
- Tree growth is measured by volume.
- Most species go through three distinct phases.
- Growth depends on many things.
- Some can be controlled by management.
- Some cannot.
- Mean annual increment (MAI) is cumulative volume
of stand divided by of growth years.
7Example Pacific NW Douglas Fir
- single cut model
- marginal increment and current increment
- discount rates
- planting and harvesting costs
8Multiple Harvests
- Simple model capital gain from letting trees
grow gt as discount rate. - Infinite horizon capital gain also includes
opportunity cost of delaying next cycle. - Adding new type of cost shortens optimal harvest
period.
9Extensions of Basic Economic Model
- Rising output prices
- Non-timber values
- Carbon sinks
- Biodiversity
10Deforestation
- Clearing of forested lands for non-forest uses.
- Open access leading to capture problems.
- Policies contribute to loss
- Governments charge low royalties.
- Concessions uncertain or short in length.
- Restrictions or taxes on export of unprocessed
logs. - Land resettlement and agricultural subsidies
- Subsidized infrastructure
11Deforestation and Property Rights
- Study of 120 countries population pressure,
income growth, and insecure ownership. - Weak association with population growth
- Inverse relationship with income.
- Strong association with insecure ownership.
12International Governance
- International Tropical Timber Agreement
sustainably produced tropical timber. - Developing nations include all timber.
- Agreement lacks
- definition of sustainable practices
- way of compensating nations that preserve
forests.
13Some Encouragement
- UNESCOs Man and the Biosphere Program protects
244 reserves in 65 countries. - Brazils protected areas 12 million hectares.
- Indonesia has gt 500 conservation areas.
- Peru has more than 20 parks and protected areas
adding up to gt 4.3 million hectares.
14Conclusions
- Ramsey Rule and optimal rotation intervals
- Non-timber values
- Deforestation
- Public policy failures
- Open access
- Insecure ownership