In their 1963 classic Scarcity and Growth Howard Barnett and Chandler Morse argued that resource scarcity did not threaten economic growth. A second investigation in the late 1970s, Scarcity and Growth Reconsidered, reached largely the same conclusion. The 25 years since that work was published have witnessed many developments. The message of Scarcity and Growth that depletion of market resources was not a problem has given way to a concern that "new scarcities" of environmental quality, global climate, and biological diversity are emerging. Resources for the Future recently assembled a distinguished group of international scholars to again address scarcity and growth. This paper describes their charge and summarizes their findings. Technol...
The notion that natural resource stocks are ultimately exhaustible might at first glance imply that ...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
Economists since the First Industrial Revolution have been interested in the links between economic ...
In this volume, a group of distinguished international scholars provides a fresh investigation of th...
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...
The global population is expected to reach nine billion by 2050, intensifying "environmental scarcit...
The analysis presented in this paper is concerned with the effect of resource scarcity on economic g...
This article reviews issues related to the incorporation of non-renewable re-sources in the theory o...
A landmark publication by Harold J. Barnett and Chandler Morse in 1963 (Scarcity and Growth: The Eco...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
(print) 108 p. ; 21 cmBoulding, K. E. The limits to progress in evolutionary systems.--Kammen, M. Fr...
The notion that natural resource stocks are ultimately exhaustible might at first glance imply that ...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
Economists since the First Industrial Revolution have been interested in the links between economic ...
In this volume, a group of distinguished international scholars provides a fresh investigation of th...
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...
The global population is expected to reach nine billion by 2050, intensifying "environmental scarcit...
The analysis presented in this paper is concerned with the effect of resource scarcity on economic g...
This article reviews issues related to the incorporation of non-renewable re-sources in the theory o...
A landmark publication by Harold J. Barnett and Chandler Morse in 1963 (Scarcity and Growth: The Eco...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
(print) 108 p. ; 21 cmBoulding, K. E. The limits to progress in evolutionary systems.--Kammen, M. Fr...
The notion that natural resource stocks are ultimately exhaustible might at first glance imply that ...
This paper studies to which extent a firm using a scarce resource input and facing environmental reg...
Economists since the First Industrial Revolution have been interested in the links between economic ...