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Lecture 23: Sustainability

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Title: Lecture 23: Sustainability


1
Lecture 23 Sustainability
2
Sustainability in Economics
  • In economics, an economy is sustainable if
    future generations will be able to enjoy the same
    standard of living as the current generation.
  • Work by Hartwick (1977), a Queens natural
    resource economist, and others has identified a
    necessary condition for economic sustainability
    that a nations capital be kept intact.
    Capital here refers not only to physical
    capital but to any stock from which services
    flow.
  • The intuition behind keeping capital intact is
    that, in order to have a constant stream of
    income into the future, you need to have a
    constant amount of wealth from which to earn
    income. If you want to keep drawing interest out
    of your bank account, you must not dig into the
    principal.
  • If population grows, national wealth or national
    capital must actually increase so that the
    capitallabour ratio is kept intact.

3
The Basic Model
  • In the 1960s and beyond, economic growth was a
    hot topic, and economists used a highly
    simplified model of the economy, based on the
    aggregate production function Y GDP F(K,L).
  • This is called the neoclassical production
    function.
  • All inputs are essential
  • Even at very high prices, all inputs will be used
  • Inputs can drop very low there is no threshold
    level of input necessary (Daly criticizes)
  • All inputs are substitutable to some degree.
    (Daly criticizes)
  • Inputs engage multiplicatively synergies
  • Constant Returns to Scale.

4
  • In these growth models, part of Y is eaten, and
    the part not consumed is invested in K. So we
    have another equation I Y C.
  • Robert Solow (1974) used Y F(K,L,R), where R is
    an exhaustible resource like oil. S is the total
    stock of oil, and S falls every year by amount
    R(t).
  • Solow showed that, if there were no population
    growth, and
  • if there
    were no depreciation of K, then
  • a constant level of consumption (or consumption
    per person) could be sustained indefinitely.
  • John Hartwick (1977) showed what was going on in
    the math. The amount being invested (not
    consumed) is equal to the rents from resource
    extraction.
  • Hotelling rent is the difference between the
    price of the marginal ton of oil extracted, and
    its marginal extraction cost.
  • Hartwick has shown that if I Hotelling rent R
    total Hotelling rent (THR), then the value of K
    R is being held intact, and consumption is
    sustainable. S ? K?
  • This is known as Hartwicks Rule

5
  • Hartwick showed that, if resource rents were
    reinvested in physical capital according to
    Hartwicks rule, consumption could be sustained.
  • As recently as this year, it has been shown that,
    if more than resource rents were reinvested in
    physical capital, consumption could grow. In
    fact, for every extra amount reinvested implies a
    level of population growth that would be
    manageable at a constant per capita consumption
    level. The population growth is not geometric,
    however. It is quasi-geometric. N(t) a
    b(t)
  • Unfortunately, to get their sustainability
    result, the math still requires that there be no
    physical depreciation of capital, which is
    completely unrealistic.
  • However, if there is enough exogenous technical
    change, then physical depreciation of capital is
    not a problem.
  • Of course, if there is enough exogenous technical
    change, you dont even need to invest resource
    rents.

6
Different kinds of capital
  • Physical capital. Declines due to depreciation
    and due to shallowing (when population grows).
    Neither is a problem so long as a sufficient
    amount is saved. Output per worker can be kept
    intact. However, if the population growth rate
    increases, more must be saved, so consumption per
    worker falls.
  • Exhaustible Resources. The stock of an
    exhaustible resource like oil declines as it is
    used. Output per worker can be maintained if THR
    is invested. If more than THR is invested,
    arithmetic population growth can be tolerated.
    If either depreciation occurs or population
    growth occurs at a constant rate, output per
    worker cannot be maintained.
  • Renewable Resources. Renewable resources can be
    harvested sustainably. The optimal amount to
    harvest each year depends on demand, supply, the
    interest rate, and the biological growth rate of
    the resource. However, renewable resources are
    often over-harvested for lack of oversight and
    ownership. We may also be ignorant of some of
    the biological factors needed to determine the
    biological growth rate. As the population grows,
    demand will grow, and the maximum sustainable
    yield will be reached. At that point we may have
    to make up for declining harvest-per-person by
    investing in physical capital à la Hartwicks
    rule. (see point 2 for results).
  • Environmental Capital. Pigouvian taxes
    politically unpopular can in theory prevent the
    deterioration of environmental capital. However,
    environmental capital typically does not grow.
    There is a finite amount of clean water and air.
    To make up for environmental shallowing due to
    population growth, Hartwicks Rule-type investing
    will be needed. See point 2 for results).

7
Is any nation using Hartwicks Rule?(you do not
need to know this for exam).Ref. Martin Skancke,
Workshop on petroleum revenue management, 2006
  • Alberta taxes private owners of mineral deposits,
    and collects royalties very similar to taxes
    from those working Crown deposits. The royalties
    depend on price and volumje (gas oil) or
    profits (oil sands). From 1976-1983, 30 of
    government revenues from the energy sector were
    placed in the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust
    Fund. That shrunk to 15, then ceased in about
    1988. Recently, the Fund has been restructured,
    but Im not aware of any dedication of energy
    sector earnings to the fund. Recently, 400 was
    paid to each Albertan to represent their share of
    oil and gas revenues from Crown land. This kind
    of payment is not scheduled or required by law.
    Albertans are now considering a regular citizens
    dividend from moneys placed in the Fund.
  • According to the Norwegian Ministry of Finance,
    several oil-producing countries have some kind of
    fund paid for by taxes on oil and gas revenues or
    a share of the governments budget surplus.
  • Chile and Venezuela use the money to stabilize
    the government budget, which is very sensitive to
    variations in oil and gas tax revenues. There
    are not necessarily any public savings over the
    long run.
  • Alaska and Kuwait have savings funds which are
    separate from the government budget. Alaska
    gives about half the interest earned on the fund
    back to the citizens in the form of a yearly
    cheque.
  • Kuwait, East Timor, and Norway have financing
    funds which pay for government deficits. Here it
    is obvious when the net savings of the country
    are positive or negative.
  • According to the CIA World Factbook, Norways
    Government Petroleum Fund is currently valued
    at 250 billion, which is equivalent to about 1
    years GDP.
  • Norway uses part of its fund to buy foreign
    exchange so that Norways krone will not
    appreciate too much due to demand for Norwegian
    oil and gas. When demand for your major export
    commodity causes your currency to appreciate,
    your other export sectors are injured. This is
    known as Dutch Disease.

8
  • Hartwicks rule is that resource rents must be
    reinvested in physical capital.
  • Ignoring the depreciation of physical capital for
    a moment, there must be investment I gt THR, else
    total capital is declining due to the running
    down of the exhaustible resource. I THR is
    called economic depreciation.
  • There is a similar number that can be calculated
    for countries which exceed their optimal harvest
    of renewable resources.
  • Normally, statisticians collect data on GDP or
    GNP each year. They also calculate NDP or NNP,
    which subtracts physical capital depreciation
    from GDP or GNP.
  • Green NDP or NNP would go one step further and
    subtract economic depreciation from NDP or NNP.
  • So we see that a nations capital base can be
    run-down (depreciated) or built up
    (savings/investment).
  • A country may be investing a lot, but its
    resource base may be depreciating even faster.
    An economy needs genuine savings in order to be
    sustainable.

9
Genuine Savings
  • Genuine Savings was calculated for various
    nations in a 2006 publication of the United
    Nations titled Where is the Wealth of Nations?
    Measuring Capial for the 21st Century.
  • Gross National Saving (GNI C G ), where GNI
    is approximately equal to GDP
  • minus the depreciation of physical capital Net
    National Saving
  • Net National Saving
  • plus current spending on education
  • minus an approximation to Total Hotelling Rent
  • minus health and other damages from pollution
    (the authors included a charge of 20 per ton for
    CO2 emissions)
  • Genuine Savings

10
Genuine Savings, 2000, As of GNP

USA, Canada 8.2, 12.7
Australia 4.3
Denmark, Norway 14.8, 18.5
Ireland 22.7
Romania 3.3
Kuwait, Saudi Arabia -12.9, -26.5
Mexico, Bolivia 8.4, -0.6
Haiti, Dominican Rep 26.1, 14.2
Kenya 10.9
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