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Lecture 20: The Environment and Development. Economics and the Environment. Environment and Development: The Basic Issues. The concept of sustainable development, and linkages between the environment
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Lecture 20:The Environment and Development Economics and the Environment
Environment and Development: The Basic Issues • The concept of sustainable development, and linkages between the environment • Sustainability: a development path is sustainable ‘if and only if the stock of overall capital assets remains constant or rises over time’ • Environmental accounting: the preservation or loss of valuable environmental resources should be factored into estimates of economic growth and well-being
NNP* =GNP –Dm –Dn – R –A • NNP*: sustainable net national product • Dm: depreciation of manufactured capital assets • Dn: depreciation of environmental capital: monetary value of environmental decay over a year • R: expenditure required to restore environmental capital (forests, fisheries etc.) • A: expenditure required to avert destruction of environmental capital
Population, Resources, and the Environment • Perception that there is a limited population size which can be sustained with the earth’s finite resources • Potential for new technologies may alleviate the strain on the resources • Growing populations in the LDCs have led to land, water, and wood shortages in rural areas, and sanitation and water crisis in urban areas • Increasing population contributes to accelerated degradation of resources
Poverty and the Environment • There exists a relationship between environmental destruction and high fertility which are both out growths of absolute poverty • Preventing environmental degradation is linked to providing institutional support to the poor • Insecure land rights, lack of credit and inputs and absence of information often prevent poor from marking resource augmenting investments which would help preserve the environment
Growth versus the Environment • Question of whether or not it is possible to achieve growth without environmental damage • The worst environmental damage by the richest billion and poorest billion of the world • Therefore idea that increasing incomes of the poor would decrease environmental damage
Rural Development and the Environment • Land in LDC are already being overworked by the existing population • Increased accessibility of agricultural inputs and introduction of sustainable methods of farming are need to decrease destructive patterns of land use
Urban Development and the Environment • Rapid population increase and rural-urban migration has led to increasing urban population growth • Strain on existing urban water supplies and sanitation facilities, high costs of urban crowding • Resulting in health hazards as circumstances allow for epidemics and health crises • Research reveals that urban environment tends to worsen at a faster rate than urban population size increases so that the marginal environmental cost of additional residents rises over time
Traditional Economic Model of the Environment • Privately Owned Resources • Static Efficiency in Resource Allocation • Where total net benefit is maximized when the marginal cost of producing/extracting one more unit of the resource is equal to its marginal benefit
Common Property Resources and Misallocation (11.3) • Potential profits or scarcity rents will be competed away • Misallocation or resources under a common property system • Implication of model is the where possible privatization of resources will lead to an efficient allocation of resources • Example: relationship between the returns to labor on a given piece of land • Scarcity rent: Green area
Economic Solutions • Allow scarcity rent to be collected • Tradable rights to pollute: • Individuals incorporate externalities • SMC=Private marginal cost+pollution=MR • Requires a cap to constrain individual and world wide totals • Should all countries be required to participate?