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1. WHAT IS NATURAL RESOURCE
ECONOMICS & WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?
SPRING 2002
Larry D. SandersDept. of Ag Economics Oklahoma State University
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INTRODUCTION Purpose:
– to understand the concept of natural resource economics and its relevance
Learning Objectives:1. Introduce the course & how it is to be administered
2. Define key terms.
3. Understand the purpose of studying environmental & natural resource economics.
4. Understand the classification of resources.
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INTRODUCTION
Natural Resource Economics Syllabus– Purpose– Evaluation– Schedule
Importance of Student Activity
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Instructor/Philosophy
Personal/Professional Background Teaching Philosophy Student Info
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“Anxiety Test” “The ultimate test of a set of economic ideas. . . is
whether it illuminates the anxieties of the time. Does it explain problems that people find urgent? Does it bear on the current criticism of economic performance? . . . Does it bear upon the issues of political debate? For these, though many have always preferred to believe otherwise, do not ignite spontaneously or emerge maliciously from the mouths of agitators to afflict the comfortable.”--John Kenneth Galbraith, Economics & the Public Purpose,
1973 [bold italics added by instructor]
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Where to get more information Syllabus Sources
– Hackett– ERS-USDA Pub. No. 712– Handouts– Supplementary Readings– Govt. Documents--Library – Congress, Legislature, St/Fed Agencies– Electronic sources (note biased vs. objective sources)– “Experts”
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Key Terms Natural Resources
– Specific attributes of the environment that are valued or have proven useful to humans [or have the potential to do so]* --G. Johnston
– Aspects of nature that can be used by humans to satisfy human wants--Hite & Mulkey
– key to human use: technology, time, accessibility, appli-cation, perception; conflicts often related to culture
Economics– the study of the production, processing, distribution,
consumption of goods/services in an exchange system
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Key Terms (cont) Natural Resource Economics
– application of economics to manage naturally occurring resources for human needs/wants with efficiency as the primary goal
– efficiency may be defined in market or nonmarket terms, focused on the short or long run, relative to current or future generations, local or global in scope
– decision choices include maintaining the status quo, altering the status quo, or doing nothing with focus on relevant institutions
– evaluation always includes the costs & benefits of a decision & to whom those costs & benefits accrue
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Key Terms (cont) Environmental Economics vs. Natural Resources
Economics (Hackett)– Environmental Economics: economic basis for pollution
problems & policy alternatives– Natural Resources Economics: problems of managing
common-pool* natural resources, determining optimal rates of extraction, & understanding resource markets
– *common-pool natural resources: difficult to exclude access, but once extracted is no longer available to others (groundwater, rivers, fisheries, public forests)
Scarcity, Opportunity cost, economic rationality
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Why Study Natural Resource Economics? Natural Sciences lack commonly accepted decision
process Economics may “assume” the problem away Irreversibility Market failure Joint importance of economic and ecological
systems Physical-Natural-Economic System Links
– Improves efficient functioning of system– Improves understanding about the world we live in
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Classification of Resources1.Flow Resources (nondepletable)
a. Nonstorable (sometimes called “environmental resources”)
»Often indivisible
»Inexhaustible (in human span of time)
»Time & management relevant only to consumption, not supply
»Examples Sunshine (?), “weather”, ocean waves (?) Forests, scenic views, unique ecosystems
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Classification of Resources (cont)1.Flow Resources (cont)
b. Storable
»May be divisible
»Time & management relevant to both to consumption & supply
Water Solar, wind, wave, geothermal & hydro
energy (services)
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Classification of Resources (cont.)
2.Fund Resources (stock or depletable resources)
a. Exhaustible & Renewable
»Regenerative within human use time frame
»Assumes minimum & maximum threshold of use
»Examples Timber & crops Animals, Fish & Humans Soil & Water Quality, Grazing lands
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Classification (cont.)2.Fund Resources (cont)
b. Exhaustible & Nonrenewable
»Relatively fixed stocks/fund within human use time frame
»(1) Nonrecyclable--Examples: fossil-fuel energy resources (oil, natural gas, coal, peat)
(2) Recyclable--Examples: some minerals (iron, aluminum, gold, silver)
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Natural Resource Examples FLOW RESOURCES FUND RESOURCE NONSTORABLE STORABLE RENEW. NONRENEW.(1) NONRENEW.(2)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
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Framing Natural Resource Issues Quantity & Quality of: Land, Water, Air, Energy Public vs. Private Management Question Trend of Magnitude of Problem:
– Persistent, Chronic, Cyclical, Declining, Growing? Irreversibility Geographic scope Whose problem & who decides (ethics)? Property rights Time (short vs. long run; current vs. future
generations)
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Optimism vs. Concern for Environment & Natural Resources
Concerns– Global warming & climate impacts– Over-population & biodiversity– Soil/water quality/Mineral/energy cost/availability– Pollution/resource shortage impacts on social &
political institutions Optimism
– Legislative progress– Toxic release rates down– US competitiveness
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References for Lesson 1
Hackett text
Hite, J.C., & W. D. Mulkey. Natural Resource Economics : An Introductory Textbook, draft unpublished text.
Johnston, G.M., D. Freshwater & P. Favero (editors). Natural Resource and Environmental Policy Analysis: Cases in Applied Economics, Westview Press, Boulder, 1988.
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