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9780813829388

Natural Resource and Environmental Economics

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780813829388

  • ISBN10:

    0813829380

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1999-05-12
  • Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
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Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

Summary

Utilizes basic concepts of economics and finance to explain the relationship of the economy to the ecosystem, seeing the ecosystem as imposing biophysical constraints on economic growth. Means of sustainable economic development and sustainable resource use are stressed.Background material and alternative, more efficient, problem-solving approaches are included.

Author Biography

Dr. Tony Prato is professor of resource economics and management, and director of the Center for Agricultural, Resource and Environmental Systems at the University of Missouri-Columbia. He has written extensively on the assessment and management of natural resources. Prato is the recipient of numerous awards and distinctions and has taught and/or conducted research in the United States, the People's Republic of China, Thailand, New Zealand and Australia. His experience in the field includes service with the US Department of Energy and the US Department of Agriculture.

Table of Contents

Preface xi(2)
Acknowledgments xiii
1. Importance of Natural Resources and Environment
3(24)
Nature and Importance of Problems
3(7)
Global Warming
4(1)
Ozone Depletion
5(2)
Acid Deposition
7(1)
Conservation of Biological Diversity
8(2)
Temporal, Scientific and Policy Aspects
10(1)
Contributing Factors
11(6)
Population
11(2)
Per Capita Resource Use
13(1)
Environmental Damages
14(1)
Technology
15(2)
Approaches to Resource and Environmental Issues
17(2)
Role of Economics
19(2)
Reductionist versus Holistic Science
20(1)
Summary
21(1)
Questions for Discussion
22(1)
Further Readings
23(1)
Notes
23(4)
2. Economic and Financial Concepts in Resource Management
27(28)
Consumption and Demand Theory
27(6)
Utility Function and Indifference Map
28(1)
Constraints
29(2)
Household Equilibrium
31(2)
Production and Supply Theory
33(10)
Production Function and Isoquant Map
34(1)
Constraints
35(2)
Efficient Input Use
37(1)
Firm's Input Demand Curve
38(2)
Efficient Output
40(3)
Market Equilibrium
43(6)
Market Demand and Supply
44(4)
Example of Market Equilibrium
48(1)
Present Value
49(2)
Summary
51(1)
Questions for Discussion
52(1)
Further Readings
53(2)
3. Historical Views of Natural and Environmental Resource Capacity
55(18)
Economic Views
55(5)
Classical Economics
55(4)
Neoclassical Economics
59(1)
Conservationism
60(2)
Contemporary Views
62(1)
Limits to Growth
62(1)
Other Factors
63(2)
Indicators of Resource Capacity
65(3)
Physical Measures
65(2)
Economic Measures
67(1)
Environmental Resources
68(1)
Summary
68(2)
Questions for Discussion
70(1)
Further Readings
70(1)
Notes
71(2)
4. Economy and Environment
73(18)
Circular Flow Economy
73(2)
Material Balances
75(3)
Ecological Economics
78(2)
Sustainable Development
80(6)
Sustainable Resource Use
83(3)
Summary
86(1)
Questions for Discussion
87(1)
Further Readings
87(1)
Notes
87(4)
5. Property Rights and Externalities
91(20)
Markets and Efficient Property Rights
91(4)
Markets
91(2)
Efficient Property Rights
93(2)
Transaction Costs
95(1)
Market Failures
96(4)
Common Property and Open Access Resources
97(3)
Public Goods
100(1)
Externalities
100(4)
Types of Externalities
101(1)
Examples of Externalities
102(2)
Externalities and Property Rights
104(4)
Assignment of Property Rights
105(2)
Government Intervention
107(1)
Summary
108(1)
Questions for Discussion
109(1)
Further Readings
110(1)
Notes
110(1)
6. Natural Resource Decisions
111(14)
Natural Resource Management
111(4)
Types of Resources
115(3)
Exhaustible Resources
115(1)
Renewable Resources
116(2)
Static Efficiency
118(5)
Pure Competition
118(4)
Imperfect Competition
122(1)
Summary
123(1)
Questions for Discussion
123(1)
Further Readings
124(1)
Note
124(1)
7. Exhaustible Resource Use
125(32)
Market Dynamics
125(2)
Net Social Benefit
127(1)
Two-Period Dynamic Efficiency
128(11)
Case 1: Two-Period Efficiency with Constant Oil Demand
129(4)
Case 2: Two-Period Efficiency with Variable Oil Demand
133(6)
Multiple-Period Efficiency
139(4)
Equilibrium Conditions
139(1)
Time Path of Prices and Extraction
140(3)
Underlying Factors
143(10)
Technological Progress
143(1)
Imperfect Competition
143(1)
External Costs
144(3)
Discount Rate
147(2)
Recycling
149(4)
Exploration and Development
153(1)
Summary
153(1)
Questions for Discussion
154(1)
Further Readings
154(1)
Notes
155(2)
8. Renewable Resource Management
157(32)
Simplifying Assumptions
158(1)
Natural Growth
159(3)
Static Efficiency
162(11)
Private Property
163(1)
Examples
164(3)
Common Property
167(4)
Multiple Objective Management
171(2)
Dynamic Efficiency
173(9)
Objectives and Constraints
174(1)
Necessary Conditions
175(7)
Renewable Resource Policies
182(3)
Tax on Harvest
182(2)
Access Fees, Effort Restrictions and Other Approaches
184(1)
Summary
185(1)
Questions for Discussion
186(1)
Further Readings
187(1)
Notes
187(2)
9. Economics of Environmental Pollution
189(54)
Residual Emissions, Pollution and Pollution Damages
190(4)
Expanded Material Balances Model
191(3)
Efficient Reduction in Environmental Pollution
194(16)
Static Efficiency with Pure Competition
195(11)
Static Efficiency with Imperfect Competition
206(1)
Dynamic Efficiency
207(3)
Establishing Property Rights for Environmental Resources
210(1)
Pollution Abatement Policies
211(25)
Point Source Pollution
211(18)
Nonpoint Source Pollution
229(7)
Summary
236(2)
Questions for Discussion
238(1)
Further Readings
239(1)
Notes
240(3)
10. Natural and Environmental Resource Accounting
243(22)
Accounting Deficiencies
244(6)
Defensive Expenditures
245(1)
Resource Capacity
246(3)
Residual Pollution Damages
249(1)
Resource Accounting Methods
250(7)
Physical Accounts
250(2)
Monetary Accounts
252(5)
Satellite Accounts
257(1)
Resource-Specific Accounting
257(2)
Implications for Sustainable Development
259(1)
Summary
260(1)
Questions for Discussion
261(1)
Further Readings
262(1)
Notes
262(3)
11. Benefit-Cost Analysis of Resource Investments
265(36)
Socially Efficient Investment
266(4)
Net Social Benefit
266(1)
Timber Harvesting Example
267(3)
Special Topics in Investment Analysis
270(13)
Continuous versus Discrete Time
271(1)
Investment Evaluation Period
271(1)
Efficiency and Equity Implications of the Discount Rate
272(1)
Selection of Discount Rate
273(6)
Capital and Operating Costs
279(1)
Economic versus Financial Feasibility
279(1)
Local versus Global Efficiency
280(1)
Independent versus Interdependent Investments
280(1)
Capital Rationing
281(1)
Primary and Secondary Benefits and Costs
281(1)
Risk and Uncertainty
282(1)
Alternative Investment Evaluation Criteria
283(7)
Payback Period
283(1)
Average Rate of Return
284(1)
Net Present Value
285(1)
Annual Net Benefit
286(1)
Benefit-Cost Ratio
286(1)
Internal Rate of Return
287(1)
Example
287(3)
Evaluation of Independent and Interdependent Investments
290(6)
Independent Investments
290(1)
Interdependent Investments
291(3)
Evaluation of Multiple Resource Investments
294(2)
Summary
296(1)
Questions for Discussion
297(1)
Further Readings
298(1)
Notes
299(2)
12. Nonmarket Valuation of Natural and Environmental Resources
301(34)
Importance of Nonmarket Valuation
301(4)
Efficient Use of Exhaustible Resources
302(2)
Natural and Environmental Resource Accounting
304(1)
Resource Protection Policies
304(1)
Efficient Resource Investment
304(1)
Theoretical Basis for Nonmarket Valuation
305(6)
Willingness to Pay and Accept Compensation
305(1)
Valuing Changes in Resource Price
306(3)
Valuing Changes in Resource Quality
309(1)
Inequality between Willingness to Pay and Willingness to Accept Compensation
310(1)
Use and Nonuse Values
311(3)
Use Value
311(1)
Option Value
312(2)
Existence Value
314(1)
Bequest Value
314(1)
Estimation of Nonmarket Values
314(15)
Indirect Market Methods
315(7)
Direct Valuation Methods
322(7)
Summary
329(2)
Questions for Discussion
331(1)
Further Readings
331(1)
Notes
332(3)
Index 335

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