The Global Environment, Natural Resources, and Economic Growth
Semmler, Willi,
Professor of Economics,
New School University
Greiner, Alfred,
Professor of Business Administration and Economics,
Bielefeld University
Print publication date: 2008
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2008 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-532823-3 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195328233.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
Recently, the public attention has turned toward the intricate interrelation between economic growth and global warming. This book focuses on this nexus but broadens the framework to study the issue. Growth is seen as global growth, which affects the global environment and climate change. Global growth, in particular high economic growth rates, implies a fast depletion of renewable and non-renewable resources. Thus, this book deals with the impact of the environment and the effect of the exhaustive use of natural resources on economic growth and welfare of market economies, as well as the reverse linkage. It is arranged in three parts: Part I of the book discusses the environment and growth. The role of environmental pollution is integrated into modern endogenous growth models and recently developed dynamic methods and techniques are used to derive appropriate abatement activities that policymakers can institute. Part II looks at global climate change using these same growth models. Here, too, direct and transparent policy implications are provided. More specifically, tax measures, such as a carbon tax, are favored over emission trading as instruments of mitigation policies. Part III evaluates the use and overuse of renewable and non-renewable resources in the context of a variety of dynamic models. This part of the book, in particular, considers the cases when resources interact as an ecological system and analyze issues of ownership of resources as well as policy measures to avoid the overuse of resources. In addition, not only intertemporal resource allocation but also the eminent issues relating to intertemporal inequities, as well as policy measures to overcome them, are discussed in each part of the book.
Keywords: economic growth, global warming, climate change, renewable resources, non-renewable resources, natural resources, tax measures, carbon tax Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
1.
Introduction and Overview
2.
The Basic Economic Model
3.
Growth and Welfare Effects of Fiscal Policy
4.
The Dynamics of the Model with Standard Preferences
5.
Pollution as a Stock
6.
Concluding Remarks
7.
Introduction and Overview
8.
Facts on GHG Emissions and the Change in Average Global Surface Temperature
9.
A Descriptive Model of Endogenous Growth
10.
The AK Endogenous Growth Model
11.
A Model with Optimizing Agents
12.
Concluding Remarks
13.
Introduction and Overview
14.
Nonrenewable Resources
15.
Renewable Resources
16.
Regulation of Resources
17.
Conclusion
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
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