The events of our time reveal a world where people are more able than ever before to exploit their environment. There are questions about when and how to use resources and about the ability of current institutions to make the appropriate decisions concerning their allocation. Natural Resource Economics explores the positive contribution that economics can make to resolving issues of all kinds: the atmosphere, the land and water, and wild animals and plants. This book establishes a concert framework for thinking about resource allocation that borrows from the familiar microeconomic theory of the firm by elaborating the concept of capital asset management and extends these concepts to deal with the problems of resource utilization. In addition, the idea of market failures is used to justify the assertion that collective action is needed to achieve a more economical allocation of resources when ordinary markets are conspicuously inefficient. The book serves the student who wants to learn how to solve natural resource problems as opposite to merely read about them. By working with this volume the reader acquires a tool kit to formulate and solve intertemporal allocation problems. The first section offers an introduction to the main topics and introduces basic ideas to the general reader. The remaining three sections build on university and college lavel micro-economics and on the first university course in mathematics. The use of mathematics is motivated by the pressing need to confront problems that are difficult to solve with less powerful tools. Mathematical appendixes are provided to refresh the reader.
Les mer
Applies the theory of the firm to solving problems in resource economics.
Preface; Introduction; Part I. Elements of Resource Economics: 1. The fishery; 2. The forest; 3. The environment; 4. The mine; Part II. Intertemporal Resource Management: 5. Firms, flows, and assets; 6. Technologies, costs, and static optimization; 7. A resource film; 8. Supply and demand; 9. Resource pricing; Part III. Renewable Resources: 10. A schooling fishery; 11. Search fisheries; 12. Production externalities; 13. Amenity values; 14. Aquifers and other common pools; Part IV. Exhaustible Resources: 15. Costless production; 16. Exogenous; 17. Variable extraction costs; 18. Stock effects; 19. Taxation; 20. Examples; Epilogue: controlling to commons; Bibliography; Index.
Les mer
Applies the theory of the firm to solving problems in resource economics.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780521311748
Publisert
1990-04-27
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge University Press
Vekt
550 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
P, U, 06, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
372

Forfatter