This paper investigates the allocative efficiency of the appropriative system of water rights, within the-context of a simplified model of a water using industry. At a long run competitive equilibrium for the industry and with a prohibition on the transfer of water rights among firms, it is shown that: (1) senior appropriators claim and use more water than junior appropriators; (2) senior appropriators bear less risk than junior appropriators; (3) the allocation of water and diversion capacitie-6among firms is inefficient, being dominated by an equal sharing among firms. The equal sharing allocation, which is Pareto optimal when diversion capacities are supplied by a competitive leasing industry, can be achieved under the appropriative syst...
One key water resource challenge that faces the eastern United States today is how to regulate water...
Water is essential for life. However, the basic problem of water resource allocation has been that w...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...
In many areas, notably the arid portion of the western United States, economic development and incre...
In most countries, the state owns the water and hydraulic infrastructure, and public officials decid...
The relative merits of different property rights systems to allocate water among different extractiv...
Water is one expensive resource that can run out. The article discusses the issues of determining pr...
The Article analyzes the prior appropriation system in the Western U.S. as a compelling application ...
The concept of “priority”—an objective basis for allocating a limited resource—is fundamental to the...
I. Introduction II. Preferences, Priorities, and Water Doctrine … A. Riparian … B. Prior Appropriati...
The relative merits of different systems of property rights to allocate water among different extrac...
In this paper we propose an economic model for the optimum allocation of water within a given area w...
Allocation planning is the process by which decisions are made as to who will get how much of what r...
The prior appropriation doctrine governs allocation of the naturally-variable flow of rivers in the ...
This Article examines the definition of water rights in western water law and explores the relations...
One key water resource challenge that faces the eastern United States today is how to regulate water...
Water is essential for life. However, the basic problem of water resource allocation has been that w...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...
In many areas, notably the arid portion of the western United States, economic development and incre...
In most countries, the state owns the water and hydraulic infrastructure, and public officials decid...
The relative merits of different property rights systems to allocate water among different extractiv...
Water is one expensive resource that can run out. The article discusses the issues of determining pr...
The Article analyzes the prior appropriation system in the Western U.S. as a compelling application ...
The concept of “priority”—an objective basis for allocating a limited resource—is fundamental to the...
I. Introduction II. Preferences, Priorities, and Water Doctrine … A. Riparian … B. Prior Appropriati...
The relative merits of different systems of property rights to allocate water among different extrac...
In this paper we propose an economic model for the optimum allocation of water within a given area w...
Allocation planning is the process by which decisions are made as to who will get how much of what r...
The prior appropriation doctrine governs allocation of the naturally-variable flow of rivers in the ...
This Article examines the definition of water rights in western water law and explores the relations...
One key water resource challenge that faces the eastern United States today is how to regulate water...
Water is essential for life. However, the basic problem of water resource allocation has been that w...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...