An empirical test of the theory of exhaustible resources requires an estimate of the time path of the shadow price of the unextracted resource that generally is not observable because of the prevalence of vertical integration in natural resource industries. In this paper we use duality theory to derive an econometric model that provides a statistical test of the theory of exhaustible resources. A restricted cost function is used to obtain estimates of the shadow prices of unextracted resources. The procedure is illustrated with data for the Canadian metal mining industry. For this industry the empirical implications of the theory of exhaustible resources are strongly rejected. I
In nonrenewable resource industries, the existence of a markup of price over marginal market cost ma...
The treatment of exhaustible resources in the context of classical theory is currently the object of...
An exhaustive set of refutable implications of a price-taking, capital-accumulating, vertically inte...
Does the economic theory of exhaustible resources adequately explain producer behavior? Extant empir...
This paper generalizes extant developments of the economic theory of exhaustible resource production...
This paper has two objectives. First, it reformulates the theory of optimal use of an exhaustible re...
This paper estimates a dynamic model of the world market for nine nonrenewable resources over the pe...
Contrary to the predictions of economic theory, prices ofimportant exhaustible resources have not ap...
In this paper we study the paths of market prices and the extracted quantities of an exhaustible res...
Abstract This study investigates the problem of exhaustible resources using a dynamic input–output m...
A model of pricing of natural-resource commodities that integrates financial and product markets is ...
In this paper the binding-contracte open-loop v~n Stackelberg equilibrium in the cartel-vereus-fring...
This article addresses the question of comparing two different rates of extracting an exhaustible re...
An exhaustive set of refutable implications of a price-taking, capital-accumulating, vertically inte...
This dissertation deals with theoretical and empirical aspects of factor demand and output supply de...
In nonrenewable resource industries, the existence of a markup of price over marginal market cost ma...
The treatment of exhaustible resources in the context of classical theory is currently the object of...
An exhaustive set of refutable implications of a price-taking, capital-accumulating, vertically inte...
Does the economic theory of exhaustible resources adequately explain producer behavior? Extant empir...
This paper generalizes extant developments of the economic theory of exhaustible resource production...
This paper has two objectives. First, it reformulates the theory of optimal use of an exhaustible re...
This paper estimates a dynamic model of the world market for nine nonrenewable resources over the pe...
Contrary to the predictions of economic theory, prices ofimportant exhaustible resources have not ap...
In this paper we study the paths of market prices and the extracted quantities of an exhaustible res...
Abstract This study investigates the problem of exhaustible resources using a dynamic input–output m...
A model of pricing of natural-resource commodities that integrates financial and product markets is ...
In this paper the binding-contracte open-loop v~n Stackelberg equilibrium in the cartel-vereus-fring...
This article addresses the question of comparing two different rates of extracting an exhaustible re...
An exhaustive set of refutable implications of a price-taking, capital-accumulating, vertically inte...
This dissertation deals with theoretical and empirical aspects of factor demand and output supply de...
In nonrenewable resource industries, the existence of a markup of price over marginal market cost ma...
The treatment of exhaustible resources in the context of classical theory is currently the object of...
An exhaustive set of refutable implications of a price-taking, capital-accumulating, vertically inte...