Title of article :
Hartwickʹs rule and maximin paths when the exhaustible resource has an amenity value
Author/Authors :
Antoine d’Autume، نويسنده , , Katheline Schubert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
15
From page :
260
To page :
274
Abstract :
This paper studies the maximin paths of the canonical Dasgupta–Heal–Solow model when the stock of natural capital is a direct argument of well-being, besides consumption. Hartwickʹs rule then appears as an efficient tool to characterize solutions in a variety of settings. We start with the case without technical progress. We obtain an explicit solution of the maximin problem in the case where production and utility are Cobb–Douglas. When the utility function is CES with a low elasticity of substitution between consumption and natural capital, we show that it is optimal to preserve forever a critical level of natural capital, determined endogeneously. We then study how technical progress affects the optimal maximin paths, in the Cobb–Douglas utility case. On the long run path of the economy capital, production and consumption grow at a common constant rate, while the resource stock decreases at a constant rate and is therefore completely depleted in the very long run. A higher amenity value of the resource stock leads to faster economic growth, but to a lower long run rate of depletion. We then develop a complete analysis of the dynamics of the maximin problem when the sole source of well-being is consumption, and provide a numerical resolution of the model with resource amenity. The economy consumes, produces and invests less in the short run if the resource has an amenity value than if it does not, whereas it is the contrary in the medium and long runs. However, and without surprise, the resource stock remains for ever higher with resource amenity than without.
Keywords :
Exhaustible resourcesSustainabilityHartwick’s rule
Journal title :
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Record number :
704140
Link To Document :
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