Complementarity, impatience, and the resilience of natural-resource-dependent economies

  • Martin F. Quaas
  • , Daan van Soest
  • , Stefan Baumgärtner

    Publikation: Arbeits- oder Diskussionspapiere und BerichteArbeits- oder Diskussionspapiere

    Abstract

    We study how human preferences aect the resilience of economies that depend on more than one type of natural resources. In particular, we analyze whether
    the degree of substitutability of natural resources in consumer needs may give rise to multiple steady states and path dependence even when resources are managed optimally. This is a major shift in the interpretation and analysis of resilience, from viewing (limited) resilience as an objective property of the economy-environment system to acknowledging its partially subjective, preference-based character. We nd that society tends to be less willing to buer exogenous shocks if resource goods are complements in consumption than if they are substitutes. Hence, the stronger the complementarity between the various types of resource goods, the less resilient the economy is.
    OriginalspracheEnglisch
    ErscheinungsortLüneburg
    VerlagInstitut für Volkswirtschaftslehre der Universität Lüneburg
    Seitenumfang37
    PublikationsstatusErschienen - 2011

    Fachgebiete und Schlagwörter

    • Volkswirtschaftslehre
    • Resilience
    • substitutes and complements
    • discounting
    • multiple steady states
    • natural resources
    • path dependence
    • regime shifts
    • tipping points
    • Wirtschaftswissenschaften für Nachhaltigkeit
    • Resilience
    • substitutes and complements
    • discounting
    • multiple steady states
    • natural resources
    • path dependence
    • regime shifts
    • tipping points

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