In this paper, we show that the commonly observed decline in primary (natural resource using) sector output and employment shares, often termed structural change, can be explained as an endogenous response to the presence of nature's constraint. Structural change takes place even if consumer preferences are homothetic, and technological progress does not discriminate against the primary sector. Under certain conditions, structural change allows an open economy to grow with natural resource sustainability. Sustained and environmentally sustainable economic growth is possible even if the natural resource is exploited under open access. Well-defined property rights are neither necessary, nor sufficient for sustainable growth. We show that ther...
The purpose of this paper is twofold. First we study an endogenous growth model where the production...
We reassess Ricardo's conjecture of a secular increase in rent in an endogenous growth model with an...
This paper begins by a brief review of empirical evidence that seems to indicate that economic grow...
We study long-run growth in a multi-sector economy with non-renewable resource use and endogenous in...
This paper explores the conditions for sustainable development through two models of economic growth...
This paper explores the role of renewable resources in a tractable model of endogenous growth driven...
Artículo de publicación ISIThis paper studies a two-sector economy in which one of the sectors (the ...
International audienceConservation of renewable natural resources and promotion of economic growth a...
International audienceThis paper examines the path of an economy constrained by bio-physical limits,...
International audienceThis paper develops an endogenous growth model to study how different types of...
We study a two-sector endogenous growth model where a single consumption good is obtained using a re...
In this paper we present a structuralist two-sector model on economic development, structural change...
Traditional resource economics has been criticised for assuming too high elasticities of substitutio...
This paper investigates the relationship between population growth and economic growth, through the ...
In this paper we present a structuralist two-sector model on economic development, structural change...
The purpose of this paper is twofold. First we study an endogenous growth model where the production...
We reassess Ricardo's conjecture of a secular increase in rent in an endogenous growth model with an...
This paper begins by a brief review of empirical evidence that seems to indicate that economic grow...
We study long-run growth in a multi-sector economy with non-renewable resource use and endogenous in...
This paper explores the conditions for sustainable development through two models of economic growth...
This paper explores the role of renewable resources in a tractable model of endogenous growth driven...
Artículo de publicación ISIThis paper studies a two-sector economy in which one of the sectors (the ...
International audienceConservation of renewable natural resources and promotion of economic growth a...
International audienceThis paper examines the path of an economy constrained by bio-physical limits,...
International audienceThis paper develops an endogenous growth model to study how different types of...
We study a two-sector endogenous growth model where a single consumption good is obtained using a re...
In this paper we present a structuralist two-sector model on economic development, structural change...
Traditional resource economics has been criticised for assuming too high elasticities of substitutio...
This paper investigates the relationship between population growth and economic growth, through the ...
In this paper we present a structuralist two-sector model on economic development, structural change...
The purpose of this paper is twofold. First we study an endogenous growth model where the production...
We reassess Ricardo's conjecture of a secular increase in rent in an endogenous growth model with an...
This paper begins by a brief review of empirical evidence that seems to indicate that economic grow...