1 Natural Resource Economics Lecture One
1 Natural Resource Economics Lecture One
Resource Economics
By
George Taako Edema
Lecture Objectives
Economics
• Is a science of scarcity
• Focuses on examining trade-offs and the efficient allocation of scarce
resources among competing uses
Broad branches of economics;
• Microeconomics
• Macroeconomics
Cont…
1.Macroeconomics
• The study of the economic performance as a whole (total outputs,
employment, inflation)
2.Microeconomics
• The study of the behavior of individual or small group.
Cont…
Environmental Economics
• Is a special branch of economics that focuses on how and why people
make decision that have environmental consequences and the role of
economic institution (public or private, laws, etc.) and policies in
influencing these decisions.
An illustration
Natural resources
• Provided by nature
• Separable
• Allocable at the margin (e.g. one tree, one fish)
• May or may not require addition of other productive forces for use
• Natural resources are typically "stocks" that provide a flow of
consumable goods (e.g. a school of fish, a herd of deer).
Cont…
• Resources are typically living (e.g. trees, fish), but sometimes not
(e.g. soils, groundwater)
• Stocks are degradable, but are sometimes resilient to human activity
Cont…
Resource flows
• Are natural resources that do not exist as stocks e.g. wind, solar
energy
The key distinction from resource stocks is that consumption of
resource flow has no impact on the size of the resource or on the
availability of the resource flow in the future.
Cont…
Environmental resources
• Provided by nature
• Indivisible, i.e. can't be easily divided
• Typically the quality of the resource matters more than the quantity
• Not consumable directly
Cont…
Examples:
• Ecosystem services
• Aesthetic benefits
• Forests
• Mountains
Quality is often affected by human activity via pollution, degradation,
alteration
Some motivating questions for the course
What are the benefits and costs of using a natural resource in a particular
way?
What are the best policies to protect the environment?
How can society balance economic and environmental goals? Or
How can society balance material needs and ecosystem services and
How can society use resources while taking care of posterity.
Basic concepts
Scarcity
• Scarcity is a term used to describe the relative abundance of a
resource
• Scarcity is often indicated by price
• The more scarce a resource, the higher its price
• BUT government policies or behaviors by citizens and businesses
may also influence prices.
• Also, for some goods, especially environmental goods, markets don't
exist, so the concept of a price may be meaningless
Cont…
Efficiency
• Efficiency is a description of the way a scarce resource is used based
on a range of competing uses
• The most efficient use of a resource is that use which provides the
greatest value to society
• BUT efficiency says nothing about who owns or controls a resource
Cont…
Equity
• Equity is a description of who owns or controls a resource.
• It is a subjective indicator of fairness (e.g. distribution of income) and
necessarily requires value judgments.
• Equity is multi-dimensional and is often at the center of the debate
regarding environmental resources (e.g. spotted owl, global warming).
• Often an environmental issue involves aspects of all three concepts
above (e.g. hypoxia)
Cont…
Optimality
• Efficiency is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for optimality;
optimality includes equity
• In other wards, a given situation is optimal if it meets efficiency and
equity criteria.
Sustainability: Taking care of posterity