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Growth with Exhaustible Resources and Endogenous Population

Alessandro Cigno

University of Hull

Review of Economic Studies 1981

Stiglitz (1974) examines the implications of introducing exhaustible natural resources as an essential factor of production in the standard neoclassical growth model with constant rate of population growth. He shows that, if a steady-state solution exists, it is a saddle-point. Hence, exhaustible resources have the effect of making an otherwise stable system highly unstable. In the present paper I argue that the assumption of a constant rate of population growth is implausible in an economy constrained by exhaustible resources, and examine the implications of making the population growth rate a function of consumption and capital per capita. This simple modification alters the characteristics of the steady state in a number of interesting ways. In particular, it turns out that the steady state is stable for a range of values of the saving/income ratio.

DOI
10.2307/2296885
Volume
48 (2)
Pages
281
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