This paper explores how the dynamic management of a non-renewable resource is affected by an endogenous (i.e., mitigable) risk of expropriation. The time at risk increases with the value of the resource in the ground and decreases with the cost of expropriating the resource. When the risk of expropriation is internalized by the legitimate owner, in the absence of capacity constraints, the resource is depleted faster than it is socially optimal. Interestingly, a marginal improvement in the protection of property rights exacerbates the over-extraction of the resource. In the presence of endogenous capacity constraints, and when property rights are imperfectly protected, both under- and over-extraction are possible. If property rights are rela...
It has long been recognized that the quality of property rights greatly impacts the economic develop...
This note develops a model of optimal resource extraction under uncertainty when the stock of the re...
On the Dual Nature of Weak Property Rights In the natural-resource literature, conventional wisdom h...
This thesis investigates how the extraction of natural resources is affected by expropriation risk. ...
We study non-renewable resource extraction when institutions weakly protect the resource owner's pro...
Using a dynamic framework with strategic interactions, we study the management of a non-renewable na...
This paper explores the role of renewable resources in a tractable model of endogenous growth driven...
A government wants to exploit a renewable resource, yielding a time-varying flow of rent, by leasing...
Since September 1993, ILCA and IFPRI have been engaged in a discussion about the most important, res...
A model of resource exploitation when private ownership requires costly enforcement is developed. En...
The government contracts with a foreign firm to extract a natural resource that requires an upfront i...
We study the effect of environmental risk on the extraction of a common resource. Using a dynamic an...
The property rights regime is an important link between the yield of a natural resource and the appr...
We study how the strength of property rights to individual extractive firms affects a regulator’s ch...
Abstract of associated article: We study how different regimes of access rights to renewable natural...
It has long been recognized that the quality of property rights greatly impacts the economic develop...
This note develops a model of optimal resource extraction under uncertainty when the stock of the re...
On the Dual Nature of Weak Property Rights In the natural-resource literature, conventional wisdom h...
This thesis investigates how the extraction of natural resources is affected by expropriation risk. ...
We study non-renewable resource extraction when institutions weakly protect the resource owner's pro...
Using a dynamic framework with strategic interactions, we study the management of a non-renewable na...
This paper explores the role of renewable resources in a tractable model of endogenous growth driven...
A government wants to exploit a renewable resource, yielding a time-varying flow of rent, by leasing...
Since September 1993, ILCA and IFPRI have been engaged in a discussion about the most important, res...
A model of resource exploitation when private ownership requires costly enforcement is developed. En...
The government contracts with a foreign firm to extract a natural resource that requires an upfront i...
We study the effect of environmental risk on the extraction of a common resource. Using a dynamic an...
The property rights regime is an important link between the yield of a natural resource and the appr...
We study how the strength of property rights to individual extractive firms affects a regulator’s ch...
Abstract of associated article: We study how different regimes of access rights to renewable natural...
It has long been recognized that the quality of property rights greatly impacts the economic develop...
This note develops a model of optimal resource extraction under uncertainty when the stock of the re...
On the Dual Nature of Weak Property Rights In the natural-resource literature, conventional wisdom h...