Whether economic growth can be sustained in a finite natural world is one of the earliest and most enduring questions in economic literature. Even with unprecedented growth in human population and resource consumption, humans have been quite adept at finding solutions to the problem of scarce natural resources, particularly in response to signals of increased scarcity. Because environmental resources generally are not generally traded on markets, however, scarcity signals for these resources may be inadequate, and appropriate policy responses are difficult to implement and manage. In the debate over the economic scarcity of natural resources, one significant change in recent years has been a greater focus on the ecosystem services and the r...
Economists since at least the time of Adam Smith have regarded the progress of human societies over ...
The paper develops a model with non-exponential population growth, nonrenewable natural resources, a...
Over the course of the past decade, significant steps have been taken to empirically link indicators...
Whether economic growth can be sustained in a finite natural world is one of the earliest and most e...
In this volume, a group of distinguished international scholars provides a fresh investigation of th...
In this paper, we have analysed the interaction between the environment and economic growth from the...
Since the 1950s, as economics has responded to new environmental challenges, views on natural resour...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
In their 1963 classic Scarcity and Growth Howard Barnett and Chandler Morse argued that resource sca...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible na...
Most ecological and environmental resources are scarce. Ecological economics and environmental econo...
The natural environment yields a large source of economic production. Most production processes rel...
The notion that natural resource stocks are ultimately exhaustible might at first glance imply that ...
Low entropy accumulations of matter and energy are more economic for humans to exploit as natural re...
The economic process transforms raw materials and energy into economic products and waste. On a fini...
Economists since at least the time of Adam Smith have regarded the progress of human societies over ...
The paper develops a model with non-exponential population growth, nonrenewable natural resources, a...
Over the course of the past decade, significant steps have been taken to empirically link indicators...
Whether economic growth can be sustained in a finite natural world is one of the earliest and most e...
In this volume, a group of distinguished international scholars provides a fresh investigation of th...
In this paper, we have analysed the interaction between the environment and economic growth from the...
Since the 1950s, as economics has responded to new environmental challenges, views on natural resour...
Most natural resources that are used in production are non-renewable. When they become depleted they...
In their 1963 classic Scarcity and Growth Howard Barnett and Chandler Morse argued that resource sca...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible na...
Most ecological and environmental resources are scarce. Ecological economics and environmental econo...
The natural environment yields a large source of economic production. Most production processes rel...
The notion that natural resource stocks are ultimately exhaustible might at first glance imply that ...
Low entropy accumulations of matter and energy are more economic for humans to exploit as natural re...
The economic process transforms raw materials and energy into economic products and waste. On a fini...
Economists since at least the time of Adam Smith have regarded the progress of human societies over ...
The paper develops a model with non-exponential population growth, nonrenewable natural resources, a...
Over the course of the past decade, significant steps have been taken to empirically link indicators...