← Search

Renewable Natural Resource Management and Use without Markets

Gardner M. Brown

University of Washington

Journal of Economic Literature 2000

Natural resources, by their nature, are not readily bent to the status of private property. Efficient resource use is complicated by jurisdictional externalities, public goods, non-use values, and beneficiaries spatially separated from the location of resources. The task is made more challenging by ecological complexity that obscures cause (benefits) and effects (costs), and dramatic time lags between individual actions and subsequent social consequences that, together with substantial uncertainty, introduce the chance of irreversibilities. Resource economists have played a major role in the literature on externalities, the development of individual transferable quotas, non-market valuation techniques and common property management.

DOI
10.1257/jel.38.4.875
Volume
38 (4)
Pages
875-914
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref