Term
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Definition
70% of Africa is under the age of 30. Soon a lot of young people will be entering the workforce. More labour intensive forms of agriculture can absorb this shock. In order to avert a huge unemployment problem, we need to have a strong non-farm industry to absorb the rest of the shock. Secondary education demands will skyrocket. Having an educated workforce will be good. |
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Term
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Definition
An example of present generations saving for future generations. The Alaskans government requires that 25% of all oil revenue go to a fund to be used at some point in the future. |
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Term
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Definition
An example of the tragedy of the commons. Bison used to form massive herds in North America. They are slow to reproduce, and have a stolid temperament. They were hunted nearly to extinction in the 1800's. Were an open access resource. |
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Term
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Definition
An indirect revealed preferences valuation method. Calcultes the expenses to citizens to avoid pollution (home air cleaners, bottled water). |
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Term
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Definition
The rules of the game. If you change the height of the basketball hoop, you change what is needed to excel at basketball. If the hoop was lower, shorter players would be better than tall players. |
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Term
Before Euro-American bison market |
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Definition
Prior to the 1800's, Native American tribes had organization and strictly regulated rules about harvesting bison. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of contingent valuation where similar examples from other situations are used to determine a value. Accuracy is compromised. |
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Term
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Definition
The number of species and genetic diversity. A public good. It is decreasing. The private sector will undersupply it. |
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Term
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Definition
Started in the late 19th century. Bison are now owned privately. |
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Term
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Definition
A close substitue to cattle hide. Robe is not required on the hide for it to have value. Had a market from 1871 to 1884. Market emerged when railroads reached into bison regions. Hides can be harvested at any time of the year. The bison were hunted nearly to extinction during this period. |
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Term
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Definition
The skin and hair of the American bison. Had a market from 1820 to 1880. It can only be harvested in the late falll/early winter, when the bison have thick hair. Herds are scattered during this time, making extraction expensive. Harvest was stable due to this restriction. |
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Term
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Definition
A solution to externality issues. One party pays another party to put up with the externality, or pays the externality causer to lessen the externality. Who pays who is a matter of property rules. |
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Term
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Definition
When property rights belong to individuals. The pursuit of profit drives the economy. This is not necessarily inconsistent with the needs of society as a whole. |
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Term
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Definition
A group of suppliers that purposefully restrict production to raise prices, giving an effect similar to a monopoly. |
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Term
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Definition
A solution for pollution externalities. The polluting firm will determine an optimal level of pollution management with this new cost. The optimum level of pollution will not be zero. |
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Term
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Definition
Pollution of greenhouse gasses is causing atmosphere heat to go up. Will cause bad things for human health, cause rising sea leveles, more intense weather systems, and disaplacement of ecosystems. Effects will become more intense over the next century. Developing countries will be hit the hardest, while developed countries will be contributing most to it. Deforestation contributes to climate change. Costs of climate change are international, but the costs of reducing climate change are national. This causes an inefficiency. |
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Term
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Definition
None are perfect. All of them over-estimate. |
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Term
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Definition
A system where nothing goes in or out. The earth is a closed system for material, but not for energy. Incomiming meteorites and outgoing spacecraft are small enough to be considered negligible. Anything taken from the environment is returned as wastes. |
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Term
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Definition
Idea by R.H. Coase. As long as negotiation costs are low and the number of parties small, parties can self-negotiate externality issues and reach an efficient allocation. |
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Term
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Definition
A method of determining intangible costs. A combination of engineering and survey approach. Survey determines the available technologies and unusual circumstances, engineering determines the truthful costs of those technologies and circumstances. |
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Term
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Definition
Non-exclusive, divisible. |
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Term
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Definition
When more than one person owns property. Can be successful in some cases. |
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Term
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Definition
There are many buyers and many sellers. No one's actions have any significant effect on market prices. To achieve this, governments must apply anti-monopoly policies. |
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Term
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Definition
Two goods where if the price of one goes up, demand for the other goes down. |
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Term
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Definition
An indirect stated preference valuation method. A survey where respondents choose between various states of the world presented with attributes and prices. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Consumer net benefits
The area of net benefits over the price line, under the demand curve, and to the left of the quantity line. |
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Term
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Definition
A direct, stated method of determining nonuse values. Includes surveys. The problem is that people may give biased answers. |
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Term
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Definition
An example of the self-extinction premise. An ancient Mayan city. Their population exceeded the carring capacity of their land. Humans remains show evidence of widespread infant mortality and malnutrition. |
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Term
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Definition
The most popular way to value the environment. Responds to the concerns of those who not believe in anthropomorphic valuation of the environment.
1. Identify affected categories
2. Estimate the physical relationship between an action and the damage
3. Estimate the response of the affected parties towards averting or mitigating damages.
4. Place a monetary value on the damages
Every step is difficult and has many pitfalls and different methods to do it. |
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Term
Cost-effectiveness analysis |
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Definition
An alternative to benefit/cost analysis. A maximum level of damage is decided upon. Then the minimum costs to provide this level are found through optimization procedure.
Problem: not all cost-effectiveness outcomes are efficient. |
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Term
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Definition
A component of a discount rate. The rate of return when no risk is involved. |
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Term
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Definition
Founded by Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess. Nature has an intrinsic value independent of humans. Humans should only use the environment for our survival, no more. |
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Term
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Definition
A graph showing how much of a thing will be bought at any given price. |
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Term
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Definition
Factors that change the demand curve:
Change in number of buyers
Change in buyers' tastes
Change in income
Change in price of related goods (substitutes, complements) |
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Term
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Definition
A method of valuation that looks at observed values. |
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Term
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Definition
Can change the outcome of a decision. The topic of many debates, such as on climate change action. Too low of a discount rate results in approving too many projects.
Consists of:
1. Cost of capital
2. A risk premium. |
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Term
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Definition
Converted the future benefits and costs into present value. |
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Term
Discrepancy between WTP and WTA |
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Definition
When measured with surveys, people are more willing to accept compensation for a loss than they are to pay to not have the loss. The discrepancy is larger when it is a public good. |
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Term
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Definition
A policy which results in maximized net benefits for every possible outcome. Risk is irrelevant. |
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Term
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Definition
Static efficiency over a period of time. Maximizes present benefits at all points. |
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Term
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Definition
An example of the self-extinction premise. An island off the coast of Chile. Evidence of an advanced society (large statues), but their population exceeded the carrying capacity of the island. People were driven to cannibalism and war before they died out. |
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Term
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Definition
Uses a variety of methodologis, including neoclassical economics. |
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Term
Efficient property right structure |
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Definition
Property has exclusivity, transferability, and enforceability. |
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Term
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Definition
One of the characteristics of efficient property rights structure. All property rights are secure from involuntary seizure or encroachment by outside parties. |
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Term
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Definition
A method of determining intangible costs. All expenses are carefully cataloged, using the lowest cost technology available.
Problem: the firm may have an unusual or unexpected circumstance that increases costs. |
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Term
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Definition
Energy that cannot be used to do work. Every time energy is transferred, some entropy is created. No energy transfer is 100%. |
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Term
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Definition
Emphasises maximizing human welfare, using incentives to modify human behaviour. |
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Term
Environmental quality standard |
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Definition
A minimum level of environmetal cleanliness enforced by policies. Supply and demand situation is used to determine the optimal level of cleanliness. Optimal level will not be zero. Those who pay for the clean-up may not benefit from it. |
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Term
Environmental sustainability |
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Definition
Extract at or below the rate at which nature can replenish a resource. Physical flow of natural capital is maintained, rather than the value of capital. |
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Term
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Definition
Used in benefit/cost analysis. Maximization of net benefits occurs when marginal benefit equals marginal costs. |
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Term
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Definition
In 1965 she wrote a piece opposing the ideas of Thomas Malthus. She said that as popuation rises, people will be innovative and find ways to make more food. The non-farming sectors will fuel the economy. In reality, these effects plateau after a population density of 500 - 600 per square km of arable land. At this density, intensification of agriculture becomes unsustainable. |
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Term
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Definition
The estimate of benefits and costs before the fact. Never as accurate as ex post. |
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Term
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Definition
The benefits and costs, after the fact. |
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Term
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Definition
One of the characteristics of efficient property rights structure. All the benefits and costs of property accrue to the owner of the property. |
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Term
Expected present value of net benefits |
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Definition
In a risky situation, the weighted (by their probability) net benefits of a decision. Always choose the decision with the highest expected present value. This method assumes that society is risk-neutral. |
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Term
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Definition
A departure from efficiency. When the welfare of one agent depends on the actions of another. Can be negative, positive, or pecuniary. May be solved with a bribe. |
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Term
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Definition
An oil tanker that had a huge oil spill in 1989. The oil company had to pay $2.5 billion for the damages. They had to value the environment to determine this number. |
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Term
First Eqimarginal Principle |
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Definition
Net benefits are maximized when the marginal benefits from an allocation are equal to the marginal costs. |
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Term
First Law of Thermodynamics |
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Definition
Energy and matter cannot be created or destroyed. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A person who benefits from a non-exclusive good without paying for it. |
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Term
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Definition
Some polltion will only effect people of the future. What discount rate should we apply on these future costs? Any reasonable rate reduces the costs to almost nothing. If we truly care about future generations, a 0% discount rate should be used. |
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Term
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Definition
An idea by James Lovelock.
The earth is a complex living creature with many complex feedback loops, capable of finding a type of homeostasis, regardless of human activities. |
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Term
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Definition
The genetic variety within a species. Enhances opportunities for breeding projects. |
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Term
Geographic Information System (GIS) |
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Definition
A mapping system that can have many layers. Used in hedonic property valuation. This software is needed to analyse the huge amount of data. |
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Term
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Definition
A departure from efficiency. When the government is to blame for an economic inefficieny. |
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Term
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Definition
In 2004/2005, Ontario decided that they would disallow agricultural land owners to remove thier land from agricultural use. The idea was to slow urban sprawl, but property values plummeted. Option value was lost. |
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Term
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Definition
Developed by John Hartwick. Constant consumption of a resource is possible if all the scarcity rent is invested in capital. Future generations are left at least as well off as the present generation. If principle is declining, allocation is unsustainable. |
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Term
Health effects of pollution |
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Definition
It is impossible to determine exactly what they are because:
1. It is unethical to perform experiments on humans, so only animals can be used.
2. Data using animals only shows the health effects onaimals.
3. It is difficult to disentangle damage from other causes out of statistical analysis. |
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Term
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Definition
Includes hedonic property value and hedonic wages. Carefully compares the prices of similar products, and tries to determine what qualities alter the cost. May include many factors. |
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Term
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Definition
An indirect revealed preference valuation method. GIS used to determine it. Uses simple regression to tease out the value of environmental components in property values. All other things being equal, property values are lower in polluted areas or areas near superfund sites. |
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Term
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Definition
An indirect revealed preference valuation method. Uses multiple regression to tease out the value of risk compensation in salaries. All other things being equal, people who work in polluted and/or risky jobs are paid more. |
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Term
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Definition
When the respondent to a survey says their willingness to pay is one way, but in reality it is lower. Because it is only hypothetical money, the WTP is inflated. |
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Term
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Definition
An alternative to benefit/cost analysis. Doesn't apply monetary value. Doesn't optimize. A policy maker simply evaluates a series of options and makes a decision accordingly. |
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Term
Improperly defined property rights |
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Definition
A departure from efficiency. |
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Term
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Definition
A method of valuation that looks at extrapolated values. |
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Term
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Definition
A graph showing how much of a thing an individual person would purchase at various prices. |
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Term
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Definition
One person's consumption of a good doesn't effect another person's consumption. |
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Term
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Definition
When the respondent to a survey doesn't have enough information to answer the survey accurately. |
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Term
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Definition
Benefits that cannot be easily assigned a monetary value because data is not available or unreliable. The value used to have varying degrees of effect on the decision outcome. Ignoring intangible benefit biases the results. |
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Term
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Definition
The phenomenon of people reaching social efficiency while trying to maximize their own benefits. |
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Term
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Definition
When a peice of land is developed, it reates jobs, homes, goods, and wealth for humans. It degrades the ecosystem, often irreversibly. |
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Term
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Definition
An unfortunate busniess in Africa. A village is in communal ownership of a piece of land. An investor offers to buy the land fro the chief. They use guns and threats to force him/her to "sell" the land legally, then take over. Yields enormous profits for the investor. |
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Term
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Definition
In Africa they are usually created by foreign investments in land. In some cases it has a spillover effect that benefits the community. In some cases it does not. |
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Term
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Definition
A personal preference of one thing over another. |
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Term
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Definition
Rules that require that firms that emit externalities give compensation to damaged parties after the fact. Requires expensie, case-specific investigation, has a high transaction cost. |
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Term
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Definition
Says that environmental issues are no longer a problem. |
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Term
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Definition
When all costs are variable. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Marginal opportunity cost curve.
The additional cost of producing the last unit. |
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Term
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Definition
The opportunity cost of the resource being saved for the future. The distance between the intersecion of two demand periods and the quantity axis. In the absence of scarcity, marginal user cost is zero. |
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Term
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Definition
When the demand is exactly the same as supply. Consumer and producer surplus are both maximized. This is efficient. |
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Term
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Definition
The sum of all the individual demand curves in a society. |
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Term
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Definition
A direct preference method of determining values. |
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Term
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Definition
Try to potimize everyone's individual lexicographic preferences. |
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Term
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Definition
In Africa, they are urban investors who bough land and are hiring other people to cultivate it for profits. These people have political leverage, and can effect policy making more so than a smallholder farmer could. |
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Term
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Definition
The analysis of analyses. A form of contingent valuation where the results of past studies are used to estimate the value. Accuracy is compromised. |
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Term
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Definition
When there is only one seller. An imperfect market structure. |
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Term
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 |
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Definition
Signed by President Nixon. Requries that all federal agency proposals with an effect on the environment include a report on quantified impact and alternatives to the action. |
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Term
National Oceanic Atmospheric Aministration (NOAA) |
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Definition
After the Exxon Valdez incident, they conducted research into the validity of nonuse value. |
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Term
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Definition
|
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Term
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Definition
aka External diseconomy
When the affected party is damaged by the externality. Externality is generally oversupplied. Price of product is too low. |
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Term
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Definition
When a first thing causes a second thing that causes less of the first thing. Eventually winds down and stops. |
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Term
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Definition
The triangle between the demand curve, supply curve, and cost axis. |
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Term
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Definition
Cannot prevent someone else from benefitting from it once it is paid for. |
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Term
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Definition
The value placed on an environmental resource even if it will never or can never be used. The value is simply for the "resource"'s existance. |
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Term
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Definition
Describes what ought to be. Opinions and personal values. |
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Term
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Definition
A possible solution to rising energy costs due to carbon emission regulations. |
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Term
Office of Management and Budget |
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Definition
In 1970 they standardized the rules about what discount rates could be used. |
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Term
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Definition
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
An oil cartel. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Res nullius
When no one owns a thing. Resources are claimed on a first come first serve basis. Causes the tragedy of the commons. Generally over-harvested. A cause for allocation inefficiency. External costs include contemporaneous and integrational external costs. |
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Term
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Definition
A system where things may come in or out. The earth is an open system for energy. The sun radiates the Earth, depositing energy. |
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Term
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Definition
The cost for using resources in an alternative way. The benefts lost when the resources are foregone in another use. |
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Term
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Definition
The process in cost-effectiveness analysis where the east cost way towards a goal is determined. |
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Term
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Definition
The value placed on an environmental resource to reserve the ability/right to use it at some point in the future. |
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Term
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Definition
Named after the Swiss-Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto. Allocations where there is no other feasible allocation that would benefit more people without deleterious bad effects on other people.
All the goods a person prefers must be available to be bought. All of the markets for these goods must be competitive. Dependent on the initial arrangement of goods. |
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Term
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Definition
When an externality is transmitted through prices. |
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Term
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Definition
Buildings, equipment, roads, et cetera. |
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Term
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Definition
A solution to negative externalities. A tax that causes firms to lessen production and the externality. |
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Term
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Definition
Describes what was, what is, and what will be. Facts only. |
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Term
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Definition
aka External economy. When the affected barty benefits from the externality. Externality is generally undersupplied. |
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Term
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Definition
When a first thing causes a second thing that then causes more of the first thing. Just keeps inreasing and increasing.
Example: greenhouse effect. As the atmosphere warms up, more methane is released into the atmsophere. |
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Term
Potential compensation criterion |
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Definition
If some people are worse off because of a decision, the people who are better off could fully compensate them and still themselves be better off. If this fact is true, the decision is good.
As to wheather the loosing party should be compensated is a matter of normative economics. |
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Term
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Definition
The value today of investment.
PV = Bn / (1 + r)n |
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Term
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Definition
Effects that are directly and obviously correlated to an action.
Example: cleaning a lake results in increased recreational activities in the lake. |
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Term
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Definition
When one person owns property |
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Term
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Definition
The area in net benefits below the price line. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Producer net benefits
The area under the price line and above the supply curve, to the let of the quantity. In the long run, equal to profits plus rent. If new firms can enter and exit without raising the prices, producer surplus is zero. |
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Term
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Definition
A bundle of entitlements that define the owner's right, privileges, and limitations. |
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Term
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Definition
Court-decided rules that determines the initial rights to a resource. Determine who pays who in a bribe. Negotiation costs may be high. Without negotiation, the party who can most easily sieze property rights does so. |
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Term
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Definition
Non-exclusive, indivisible. A departure from efficiency. |
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Term
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Definition
When organizations use politics to create inefficiencies that benefit them, often at the expense of society. Often goes unnoticed due to voter ignorance. |
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Term
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Definition
Preferences determined based on actual observable costs and benefits. Use value preferences. |
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Term
|
Definition
When there are range of outcomes from a decision. To determine what the correct decision is, a benefit/cost analysis may be performed on all possible outcomes. The decision with maximum net benefits should be chosen. For irreversible decisions, the decision should be postponed as long as possible to give time to gain information. |
|
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Term
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Definition
A person who will not take a fair bet. The kind of person who would buy insurance. |
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Term
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Definition
A person who will take a fair bet. The kind of person who would gamble. |
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Term
|
Definition
A person who is indifferent betwen taking and not taking a fair bet. |
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Term
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Definition
Part of a discount rate. An additional cost to compensate for risk. |
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Term
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Definition
An idea by David Ricardo. The producer surplus that persists in a long-run competitive market. |
|
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Term
Second equimarginal principle |
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Definition
Used in cost-effectiveness analysis. The least-cost means of achieving a goal will be met when marginal cost of all possible means of achievement are equal. |
|
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Term
Second law of thermodynamics |
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Definition
Entropy always increases with every energy transfer. |
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Term
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Definition
The effects of a primary effect.
Example: cleaning a lake results in increased recreational activities, which result in increased employment around the lake. |
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Term
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Definition
The idea that when an empire is built, it sows the seeds of its own demise. Societies don't react in time for a disaster, and/or their reaction just makes the disaster worse. |
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Term
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Definition
When at least one cost is fixed. |
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Term
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Definition
In Africa, they are farmers with tiny plots of land. 70% of farmers. They sell almost nothing. Using the land to feed their families, getting income from off-farm employment. |
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Term
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Definition
When property rights are owned by the state. Doesn't always serve society's interests. |
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Term
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Definition
When the structure of the survey biases the answer. |
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Term
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Definition
When the government owns property. Exists in varying degrees in capitalist countries. |
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Term
|
Definition
Preferences determined based on indirect costs and benefits. Nonuse value preferences. Can be determined through contingent valuation. |
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Term
|
Definition
aka Efficiency
An allocation of resources where net benefits are maximized. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
The value of something right now. The present value of flow. If maximized, there is efficiency. |
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Term
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Definition
When a respondent to a survey answers untruthfully in a way to strategically control the outome of the survey. |
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Term
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Definition
A form of sustainability according to the Hartwick Rule. Counts only natural capital. Doesn't allow for as much extraction of natural resources as weak sustainability. |
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Term
|
Definition
Two goods where if the price for one goes up, the demand for the other goes up. |
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Term
|
Definition
A toxic waste site. Poses a threat to the land around it. Property values are diminished. Distance from these sites increases the property value, according to hedonic property value. |
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Term
|
Definition
Factors that shift the supply curve:
Change in number of suppliers
Change in price of inputs
Technological advances
New regulations |
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Term
|
Definition
A way to determine intangible costs. Simply ask those who bear the costs how much the cost is.
Problem: there may be incentive to inflate costs and change a decision in their favour. |
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Term
|
Definition
Makes sure that extraction of a resource can be stable over time. |
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Term
|
Definition
Future generations should be left no worse of than current generations. When you use a discount rate, these criterion are not met. |
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Term
|
Definition
Where both parties in an externality issue have initial rights. They will usually be able to work out an efficient compromise. |
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Term
|
Definition
Benefits that can be easily assigned a monetary value. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
Within one lifetime, average income is rising extremely quickly. Countries are doubling their wealth in just 10 years time. |
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Term
|
Definition
An organization which protects habitats of endangered or significant species. An example of a private sector providing biological diversity. Doesn't supply an efficient amount (undersupplied). |
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Term
|
Definition
In 1798 he published "An Essay on the Principle of Population". Predicted that human population will exceed the Earth's carrying capacity, resulting in death and starvation. However, Malthus' calculations used the technological level that was present in his time period. Knowledge of technological advancement may have changed his prediction. |
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Term
|
Definition
Money is valued differently in the future than in the present. Present money is worth more. Discounting determines the value of money in the future. |
|
|
Term
Total willingness to pay (TWP) |
|
Definition
The sum of use value, option value, and nonuse value. |
|
|
Term
Tragedy of the open access resource |
|
Definition
aka Tragedy of the commons
When parties exploit at an amount that increases their own personal benefits, but decreases the net benefits to society. Taking a bigger piece of a smaller pie. |
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Term
|
Definition
The cost of lawyer's fees, court time, et cetera, that are involved in a decision. If the transaction costs are larger than the costs of the inefficiency, it is better to stay inefficient. |
|
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Term
|
Definition
One of the characteristics of efficient property right structure. All property rights are transferable from one party to another by voluntary exchange. |
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Term
|
Definition
An indirect, revealed preference valuation method. The amount of money visitors pay to travel to sites to see it. The value of the site can be determined from this. |
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Term
|
Definition
The simplest model for finding dynamic efficiency. Looks at the allocation between two time periods. |
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Term
|
Definition
The direct use of an environmental resource. The monetary value is fairly easy to determine. |
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Term
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Definition
A human life is not priceless; scarce resources are used to preserve it. The value attched to a decrease in the risk of death. The amount an individual would be willing to pay per unit of reduction of risk adds up to about $5 million per person.
Ethics becomes an issue. Some would argue that the nonuse value of a human life is infinity dollars. |
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Definition
The monetary benefits the environment gives us, or the monetary costs that would arise from destroying parts of the environment. Difficult to assess because the environment has no market value. If it is nt valued, the default value will be set at $0. |
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Definition
A concept by John Rawls. A hypothetical meeting of people from all time periods. The veil prevents them from knowing what time period they will have to live in. They make decisions about allocation of resources through time. Make more conservative decisions for the risk that they will have to live in a future time period. |
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Definition
Moderate water stress = over 20% of available renewable fresh water is being used.
Severe water stress = over 40%.
By 2025, two thirds of the world will be under water stress. |
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Definition
A form of sustainability according to the Hartwick Rule. Counts physical and natural capital. Allows for more extraction of natural resources than with strong sustainability. |
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Willingness to accept (WTA) |
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Definition
The amount of money an individual would demand when deprived of the last unit of a good. |
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Definition
The amount of money an individual will pay for the last unit of a good. The area underneath the demand curve. |
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Definition
In 1996 they decided that between 1990 and 2015 they would halve the number of hungry people, or halve the world % of hungry people. The latter is more feasible. |
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Definition
Say that environmental issues are still a problem. |
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Definition
An international law stating that any country with an ocean coast is entitled to fishing and management rights 200 miles out to sea. |
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Definition
The formation of new forests on land that was not previously forested. |
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Definition
The largest user of water. |
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Definition
A huge rainforested area in Brazil. The single richest region of the tropical biome. Subject to deforestation and loss of biodiversity. |
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Definition
How benefits of forests are worked into the system. Marginal benefit of delaying harvest is increased. Marginal benefits may never be equal to opportunity cost. This would result in the forest never being harvest. |
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Definition
A solution to fisheries being open-access resources. Fish are kept in confined areas. Yields are higher. More control of fish. Only works for certain species. Problems with externalities such as diseases. |
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Definition
A source of groundwater. Bowl shaped, so as water is depleted, the edges run dry first. |
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Definition
Where the city of Guelph gets it water. Guelph residents use an average of 177 L of water a day. |
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Definition
A restricted transfer inefficiency in water systems. A rule where if an offstream water user fails to use water on a regular basis, they will lose water rights. Creates and incentive to over-use. |
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Definition
Used as a source of new genes for breeding projects. Most pharmaceuticals originate from tropical plants. It is decreasing. Species extinction is irreversible. Can be caused by deforestation. |
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Definition
aka Tiered
An agricultural water pricing scheme. The majority of water costs are bore by urban populations, who then benefit from cheaper foods. Complicated implementation. Good efficiency. Demand is easily controlled. |
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Term
Boil-water advisory (BWA) |
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Definition
Issued to the public when the water is contaminated or water quality is questionable. Water must be brought to a rolling bol for a minimum of one minute in order to be consumable. |
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Definition
A solution to fishery over-exploitation. The government pays fishermen to not fish. |
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Definition
Has 20% of the world's total freshwater resources. Most of this is in the northern regions and is unavailable to populations in the south. |
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Term
Carbon sequestering credits |
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Definition
A solution to climate change. Credits are given for planting trees. Problems include determining exactly how much carbon is sequestered and if it will be permanent. |
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Term
Conservation easement & land trusts |
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Definition
A solution to declining biodiversity. Money is given to developing countries for the explicit purpose of conservation activities. |
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Term
Contemporaneous external cost |
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Definition
One of the external costs of an open access resource. Borne by current generations. Too much effort is put into fishing. |
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Definition
An inefficiency in forestry. When forests are owned for a set amount of time, an efficient harvesting time may not be used. |
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Definition
The decision to convert a forest to another land use. |
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Definition
A solution to declining biodiversity. A non-government organization pays off the debts of a developing country and in return the ountry practices conservation activities. |
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Definition
Countries with larger debts tend to over-exploit their resources. |
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Definition
A volumetric water pricing scheme. The price of water decreases in blocs as water consumption increases. Places undue hardship on small use low-income households. |
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Definition
The destruction of forests. Intensifies climate change. Decreases biodiversity. Increases soil erosion and desertification. Excessive deforestation rates are inefficiencies caused by biases in profit-maximizing decisions. |
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Term
Dynamic efficient sustainable yield |
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Definition
The yield that maximizes the present net benefit, taking into account discounting. |
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Term
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Definition
1. Marginal benefit of all uses is equalized.
2. Can deal with fluctuations in water supply. |
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Definition
On average it is 0.51. It has a higher elasticity in arid climates. |
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Definition
A solution to declining biodiversity. Establishment of reserves where indigenous people can engage in traditional hunting-gathering activities. |
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Definition
A water pricing scheme. A flat fee is charged for water access. No efficiency; marginal cost is zero. Does not require a meter. Houses with this pricing scheme use more water. |
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Definition
A water pricing scheme. An unchanging rate is charged for water. |
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Definition
Having more than 50% of employment from forest-based activities. 300 communities in Canada are forest dependent. |
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Definition
Canada has 10% of the world's forest cover, 20% of the world's temperate rainforests, and 30% of the world's boreal forests. In Ontario, 91% of forests are provincially owned, 1% federally, and 8% privately. Provide products and services. Wood for building, fuel, and paper. Cleanse air of pollution. Wildlife habitat (endangered species, white-tailed deer). Watershed filtering. Tourism. |
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Definition
A territory for scallop harvesting on the border between Canada and the US. The two countries have different policies on scallop harvest. Canada had older, larger scallops because they limited entry, and operators joined together in fishing corporations. |
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Definition
An inefficiency in water systems. |
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Definition
Freshwater collected in aquifers. Renewed very slowly by percolation. 1.5 billion people rely on groundwater for survival. Has a high marginal use value. Collectiing results in land subsistence. It is an open-access resource, so it is often over-harvested. 90% of the world's readily available freshwater sources are groundwater. Only 2.5% of this is renewable. An efficient allocation takes into account competing uses, intergenerational effects, an the fact that groundwater is non-renweable. |
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Term
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Definition
The decision to harvest trees. |
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Definition
A system of continuous water circulation in the environment. A huge amount of water, but only 2.5% of freshwater. Of this, less than 1% is available for human consumption. |
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Term
Individual transfer quotas (ITQs) |
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Definition
A solution to fishery over-exploitation. Entitles the holder to catch a specified share of a specified species of fish. The sum of all the shares is the efficient harvest. Quota is freely transferable between fishermen. The total available catch may be inaccurately estimated, resulting in over-fishing. Fishermen may jettison fish in order to maximize profits, killing the fish. |
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Term
Inefficiency in water systems |
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Definition
1. Restrictions on water transfer.
2. Water prices too low. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Faustmann model
Formulate by Martin Faustmann in 1859. A model where trees are replanted directly after harvest in an infinite cycle. Efficient harvest time is the optimal rotation. There is an opportunity cost of the foregone time that coul have been used to grow the next cycle. Harvest time is shorter than in a single-harvest model. |
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Definition
An agricultural water pricing scheme. Prices are attached to water-related agricultural proucts such as fertilizers in the form of taxes. Very easy to implement. Medium efficiency. Demand is easily controlled. |
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Definition
aka Non-consumptive use
Water is not used up. Swimming, boating, fishing. Water is still available after use. May be considered to be not a beneficial use, so water rights may be taken away. |
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Term
Integrational external cost |
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Definition
One of the external costs of an open access resource. Borne by future generations. Overfishing reduced the stocks, lowering future profits. |
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Term
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Definition
A resource where the size of the stock is determined by the actions taken by society. The normal incentives of an individual often coincide with neither efficiency nor sustainability. |
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Definition
A volumetric water pricing scheme. Price of water increase as water consumption increases. Promotes water conservation. |
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Definition
The gradual settling and sinking of land. Caused by underground water movement, especially from removal of groundwater. 80% of land subsistence is caused by humans. |
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Term
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Definition
An inefficiency in forestry. Harvest costs are too low, resulting in inefficient rate of harvest. |
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Term
Marine protected area (MPA) |
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Definition
A solution to fishery over-exploitation. Protects species, habitats, and the environment. Fish may swim out of the MPA and be harvested. Yield is increased, but the increase is delayed. |
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Term
Maximum sustainable yield population (S*) |
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Definition
The population size that yields the maximum growth. The largest catch that can be perpetually maintained. Non synonymous with efficiency unless the cost of fishing is zero (which it never is). |
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Term
Minimum viable population (S) |
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Definition
The population size at which growth is negative. Deaths outweigh births. An unstable equilibrium. Values below S also result in population decline. |
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Term
Natural equilibrium (S bar) |
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Definition
The population sie that would persist in the absence of outside influences. Reductions from natural mortality are offset by the birth rate. A stable equilibrium. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Depletable resource
A resource that has a growth rate not significant on a relevant time scale. Example: water in aquifers with little or no recharge. |
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Term
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Definition
aka Consumptive use
Water is used up. Minicipal drinking water systems, agriculture. |
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Term
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Definition
The efficient time of harvest in an infinite-harvest model. It is when the marginal benefit of another year's growth is equal to the marginal opportunity cost. Determined by planting and harvesting costs. As these costs increase, the optimal rotation gets longer. |
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Definition
An agricultural water pricing scheme. Prices are based on the output a farmer produces. Easily implemented, medium efficiency. Demand is easily controlled. |
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Definition
When the demand for water is higher than normal. All water utilities must provie water demand at all times, ignoring money and environmental coosts. Generally in the summer it is hotter and there is less precipitation, so water demand is higher during these times. Infrastructure must be able to handle these peak demands. |
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Definition
An agricultural water pricing scheme. Water is charged based on the area of irrigated land and the type of crop. Very easy to implement. No efficiency; the marginal cost of water is zero. Difficult to control demand. |
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Definition
A form of forestry that may be both efficient and sustainable. Fast-growing trees are used. However, there is poor biodiversity. Plantations may require fertiliers and pesticides. |
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Definition
The illegal harvest of fish against the rules set up to prevent fishery over-exploitation. Hard to enforce rules in fisheries. |
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Definition
A restricted transfer inefficieny in water systems. The government creates a hierarchy in water uses. Uses deemed more valuable are given priority rights to water. |
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Term
Prior appropriation doctrine |
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Definition
A property right system that followed riparian rights. The person to first arrive at water has "senior" rights, and following users have "junior" rights. |
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Term
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Definition
An inefficiency in forestry. Foresters do not consider the environmental benefits of the forest, thus do not maximize social net benefits, only private benefits. |
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Term
Raising the real cost of fishing |
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Definition
A solution to over-exploitation of fisheries. Rules that make fishing more expensive. Certain technologies are banned. Fishing is only allowed during certain time periods. Benefits are lost. Hard to know exactly how much the cost of fishing is increased. |
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Definition
The replanting of forests that were deforested. |
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Definition
A resource that has a significant rate of growth on a relevant economic time scale in which planning and management are meaningful. Exmple: streams maintained by the water cycle. |
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Definition
Water from consumptive uses returning to the water source by the hydrologic cycle. |
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Term
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Definition
A process that turns sea water into fresh water. Used to be prohibitively expensive, but new technology has made it cheaper. Sea water is pressurized and prumped through a series of membranes. |
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Definition
Property rights to water that are tied to land rights. Owners of land adjacent to bodies of water have the rights to the water. Used during the early settling of the US. |
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Definition
A solution to declining biodiversity. When a forest has a species that can provide pharmaceuticals, the govenmetn can charge royalties for the use of the pharmaceuticals. An incentive to practice conservation activities. |
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Definition
A model for fish populations. Does not take into account water temperature or age structure of populations. More useful for long-term problems. |
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Definition
A volumetric water pricing scheme. Price changes by time period. Prices are the highest during peak season. Promotes water conservation during these times. This is an efficient practice. |
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Term
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Definition
Water systems would be more efficient if sewage take-away service was charged separately from water costs. |
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Term
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Definition
A model where trees are harvested only once. Efficient harvest time is not affected by planting or harvesting costs. The land has no opportunity cost. |
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Term
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Definition
An equilibrium where movement away from equilibrium triggers forces that restore equilibrium. |
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Definition
The value of an existing forest. Older trees are more valuable. |
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Term
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Definition
Freshwater in rivers, lakes and reservoirs. Flows on the earth's surface. Global collection is expected to rise. Marginal use value is very low, because natural phenomenon will replenish the water. An efficient allocation takes into account competing uses and year to year variation. |
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Term
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Definition
It is possible for efficient forestry to co-exist with sustainability defined as non-declining welfare (weak sustainability). Not possible to co-exist if sustainability is defined as protecting forests and harvesting only at the growth rate (environmental sustainability). |
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Term
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Definition
When the yield equals the growth rate of the population. This can be maintained forever. It is any point on thhe graph between S and S bar. |
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Term
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Definition
A solution to fishery over-exploitation. The cost of fishing is raised with a tax. No benefits are lost bbecause the money goes into tax dollars. Very easy to control how much the cost of fishing is increased. |
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Term
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Definition
Absorb CO2, a greenhouse gas. Can grow for up to 25 years in a forestry. Harvested trees are a salable commodity. Un-harvested trees have capital value. Very slow growth rate. Growth follows a sigmoid curve. Growth is effected by environmental factors. |
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Term
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Definition
An agricultural water pricing scheme. Volumetric pricing, plus a monthly flat fee. Complicated implementation that requires information on amount of water used by each farmer. Measuring devices can be expensive. High efficiency, demand is easily controlled. Rarely used in developing countries. |
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Term
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Definition
A volumetric water pricing scheme. Price for water is constant over all levels of consumption. |
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Term
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Definition
A water property rights system that followed prior appropriation doctrine. The state owned all the water rights and had a centralized bureaucracy that administered it. Built waterways and dams to control its flow. |
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Term
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Definition
An agricultural water pricing scheme. Complicated implementation that requires information on amount of water used by each farmer. Measuring devices can be expensive. High efficiency, demand is easily controlled. Rarely used in developing countries. |
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Definition
A town which had a tap water E. coli contamination problem in 2000. Seven people died, and 2300 people were seriously ill. The problem was caused by falsified records by Stan and Frank Koeble and the process of bureaucracy not acting quickly enough. |
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Term
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Definition
It is cheaper than diamonds, but more valuable. An essential element of life. Humans depend on it for replacing body fluids, and for food production. |
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Term
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Definition
Water evaporates or transpirates into the atmosphere then precipitates and runs or percolates into the ocean. |
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Term
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Definition
An agricultural water pricing scheme. Requires good pre-established institutions to work. Good efficiency. |
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Term
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Definition
Too low, causing inefficiency. Because 1. Water is an essential commodity, 2. Prices based on average, not marginal costs, 3. Marginal scarcity rent not included in price, 4. Marginal user cost not included in price, 5. Regulations on water price are implemented because it would be very easy for water companies to monopolize and collect inflated prices. Low water prices lead to water waste. |
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Term
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Definition
Quantity is not the only issue with water. Some water sources are contaminated with chemicals, radioactive material, salt, or bacteria. Limits the potable water supply. |
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Term
World Heritage Convention |
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Definition
An organization that buys land then resells it to owners that will practice conservation activities. |
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