Resource and Environmental Economics

Resource and Environmental Economics

Author: Anthony C. Fisher

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1981-11-30

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 9780521243063

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This book presents the major themes of the economic literature on natural resources and the environment. It is designed to bring the reader, in part with the aid of a unified model of optimal resource use, to the frontiers of the discipline, using only elementary mathematical models. Features special to exhaustible and renewable resources, including the problems posed by market imperfections, are treated as extensions of the basic model. The theoretical discussion is enriched with examples and applications, including a systematic investigation of the behaviour of resource reserves, costs, prices, and substitution possibilities. Substantial attention to environmental, as well as extractive, resources is a distinctive aspect of this book. The author describes methods of estimating the environmental costs of resource development and other projects, and presents some key empirical findings. Policy instruments to protect the environment, such as taxes, subsidies, marketable permits, and direct controls, are carefully analysed from a welfare-theoretic point of view.


Economic Theory and Exhaustible Resources

Economic Theory and Exhaustible Resources

Author: P. S. Dasgupta

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1979

Total Pages: 520

ISBN-13: 9780521297615

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A book on the economics of exhaustible resources requires no justification. A long book does. The purist will find disquieting our two-asset, constant population model with which we analyse growth possibilities in an economy with exhaustible resources.


Optimal Depletion of an Exhaustible Resource

Optimal Depletion of an Exhaustible Resource

Author: Suresh Sethi

Publisher:

Published: 2019

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This paper considers an optimal control problem for the dynamics of an exhaustible natural resource model, the optimal control being the price over time to maximize the total present value of a parameterized social welfare function under the assumption that a substitute become available at a high enough price. Thus, the problem can be reinterpreted as one of the optimal phasing-in of an expensive substitute. Furthermore, the problem is constrained in the sense that the total consumption of the natural resource implied by a price trajectory via the assumed demand function must not exceed the available reserves. The problem is solved, using the maximum principle, for a complete range of the parameter reflecting the weights assigned to the consumer's surplus and the producer's surplus in the social welfare function. The results and algorithms obtained in the paper are illustrated by an example.


Lecture Notes on Resource and Environmental Economics

Lecture Notes on Resource and Environmental Economics

Author: Anthony C. Fisher

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2020-06-26

Total Pages: 158

ISBN-13: 3030489582

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This book, based on lectures on natural and environmental resource economics, offers a nontechnical exposition of the modern theory of sustainability in the presence of resource scarcity. It applies an alternative take on environmental economics, focusing on the economics of the natural environment, including development, computation, and potential empirical importance of the concept of option value, as opposed to the standard treatment of the economics of pollution control. The approach throughout is primarily conceptual and theoretical, though empirical estimation and results are sometimes noted. Mathematics, ranging from elementary calculus to more formal dynamic optimization, is used, especially in the early chapters on the optimal management of exhaustible and renewable resources, but results are always given an economic interpretation. Diagrams and numerical examples are also used extensively. The first chapter introduces the classical economists as the first resource economists, in their discussion of the implications of a limited natural resource base (agricultural land) for the evolution of the wider economy. A later chapter returns to the same concerns, along with others stimulated by the energy and environmental “crises” of the 1970s and beyond. One section considers alternative measures of resource scarcity and empirical findings on their behavior over time. Another introduces the modern concept of sustainability with an intuitive development of the analytics. A chapter on the dynamics of environmental management motivates the concept of option value, shows how to compute it, then demonstrates its importance in an illustrative empirical example. The closing chapter, on climate change, first projects future changes and potential catastrophic impacts, then discusses the policy relevance of both option value and discounting for the very long run. This book is intended for resource and environmental economists and can be read by interested graduate and advanced undergraduate students in the field as well.