A landmark publication by Harold J. Barnett and Chandler Morse in 1963 (Scarcity and Growth: The Economics of Resource Availability, Johns Hopkins University Press for Resources for the Future, Baltimore) renewed a longstanding debate on the prospect of sustained economic growth under natural resources availability constraints. Their main argument was that substitutability of resources and technological progress would sustain economic growth indefinitely even in the presence of exhaustible natural resources. A decade and a half later, a forum of experts mainly from economics, energy, and mineral resources (including Barnett and the now recent Nobel laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz) reviewed the issue (Scarcity and Growth Reconsidered, Johns Hopk...
The proposition that limited natural resources provide a limit to growth and to the sustainable size...
Resource-based economic growth has had a bad press for some time. Adam Smith wrote: “Projects of min...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible nat...
In this volume, a group of distinguished international scholars provides a fresh investigation of th...
In their 1963 classic Scarcity and Growth Howard Barnett and Chandler Morse argued that resource sca...
Whether economic growth can be sustained in a finite natural world is one of the earliest and most e...
Whether economic growth can be sustained in a finite natural world is one of the earliest and most e...
Since the 1950s, as economics has responded to new environmental challenges, views on natural resour...
Economics is a science for happiness. It has been founded on ethics, especially on the utilitarianis...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible na...
Proceedings of the 1997 Georgia Water Resources Conference, March 20-22, 1997, Athens, Georgia.Since...
The proposition that limited natural resources provide a limit to growth and to the sustainable size...
Resource-based economic growth has had a bad press for some time. Adam Smith wrote: “Projects of min...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible nat...
In this volume, a group of distinguished international scholars provides a fresh investigation of th...
In their 1963 classic Scarcity and Growth Howard Barnett and Chandler Morse argued that resource sca...
Whether economic growth can be sustained in a finite natural world is one of the earliest and most e...
Whether economic growth can be sustained in a finite natural world is one of the earliest and most e...
Since the 1950s, as economics has responded to new environmental challenges, views on natural resour...
Economics is a science for happiness. It has been founded on ethics, especially on the utilitarianis...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible na...
Proceedings of the 1997 Georgia Water Resources Conference, March 20-22, 1997, Athens, Georgia.Since...
The proposition that limited natural resources provide a limit to growth and to the sustainable size...
Resource-based economic growth has had a bad press for some time. Adam Smith wrote: “Projects of min...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible nat...