Title: Natural Resource Economics
1Natural Resource Economics
2Natural Resources
- Land
- Minerals iron, quartz, potash
- Energy petroleum, coal
- Water
- Forests
- Fisheries
- Biodiversity
3Natural Resource Economics is about
- Resource Adequacy
- Resource Scarcity
- Distinction between physical and economic
scarcity
4Economic Scarcity
- A resource is scarce if there is less available
than would be demanded if its price were zero - Scarcity is a function of demand as well as
supply - e.g. gasoline
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6Natural Resource Economics is about
- The allocation of scarce resources across uses
and users - Space
- Criterion for allocation static efficiency
- Time
- Criterion for allocation dynamic efficiency
7Natural resource economics is concerned with
externalities
- Externalities shift costs
- Across space
- Across time
- When goods are non-exclusive or have high
exclusion cost - When goods are indivisible in consumption or
non-rival - When goods are congestible
- Externalities are ubiquitous
8Natural resource economists focus on institutions
- Social devices that define the rights and
obligations of participants in a decision process - Produce incentives and disincentives that cause
or resolve natural resource problems - Assume they are endogenous to the analysis
9Natural Resource Economics
- Recognizes that natural resources have extractive
uses - as inputs to production processes
- Recognizes that natural resources provide
services in non-extractive uses - e.g. recreation, scenic value, preservation of
biodiversity
10Natural Resource economists work with resource
valuation
- Efficient allocation of a scarce resource between
two competing uses requires that we know its
value in each use - Allocation issue may be between use and non-use
-- allocation between time periods - Using product and service markets to judge
natural resource values is limiting
11Natural Resource economists work with resource
valuation
- Resources matter (have value)
- In extractive uses
- In non-extractive uses
- Assumption is that resources matter (have value)
because people think they do
12Natural Resources in Sustainable Development
- To what extent should natural resources be used
to spur economic development? - Will current resource use patterns seriously
undermine other important aspects of the
development process?
13Natural Resource Use and Economic Development
- Economic well-being is measured by things like
GDP, value of final goods and services. - Growth of GDP implies economic growth and
progress (development) - If more cars are purchased, GDP increases
GDP Gross Domestic Product
14Limitations of Economic Accounting
- Increased production of cars to meet demand
stocks of ore, petroleum decline - Increased consumption of cars petroleum stocks
decline - Reductions in natural resource stocks are not
reflected in GDP - Understanding value of natural resources is key
to refining accounting measures
15- What are the implications of mining for oil in a
remote wilderness area? - Should Great Lakes water be sold to Texas or
California? - How many fishers should be allowed access to a
particular fishery and should their catches be
limited? - What difference does clean water make to the
economic climate of a state or region? - Should land be set aside as open space or for
agriculture or for recreational uses?
16Assignment for Wednesday, Jan. 19 Read The
Return of Malthus Ghost (On ANGEL)