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ENV 536: Environmental Economics and Policy

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Introduction to Environmental Economics (Lecture 1) Assist.Prof. Sasitorn Suwannathep, Ph.d. School of Liberal Arts King Mongkut s University of Technology Thonburi – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ENV 536: Environmental Economics and Policy


1
ENV 536 Environmental Economics and Policy
Introduction to Environmental Economics (Lecture
1)
  • Assist.Prof. Sasitorn Suwannathep, Ph.d.
  • School of Liberal Arts
  • King Mongkuts University of Technology Thonburi

2
The Origins of Environmental Economics
  • Lies in the 1960s, the first wave of modern
    popular green thinking and policy perceptions
    within developed countries.
  • Fundamental ideas provided the frameworks for
    environmental economics can be traced to
    eighteenth century.

3
The Economy as an Open system
  • Our economic system is underpinned by and cannot
    operate without the support of ecological
    systems.
  • In order to provide goods and services to human,
    the economy must extract resources from the
    environment, processes to end-products and
    disposes of wastes to the environment.

4
Ecological limits on the Economy
  • Economic activity is limited by the capacities
    of natural environments.
  • The works of famous scholars focused on the
    limits are
  • Malthus (1798)
  • Ricardo (1817)
  • Marx (1867)

5
Ecological limits on the Economy
  • Malthus worried about absolute limits.
  • Population growth tends to outgrow the means of
    subsistence (foods) and a state of misery will be
    the inevitable end result.

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Global population continues to rise
9
Ecological limits on the Economy
  • Ricardo viewed the limits in a relative term.
  • Limits are set by rising costs as the highest
    grade resources, which are exploited first,
    become exhausted and have to be substituted for
    by successively lower grade resources.

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14
Ecological limits on the Economy
  • Marx perceived that the economic growth might be
    limited because of social and political unrest
    within the national economy.

15
  • High incomes and high population density increase
    environmental problems around the world?
  • Higher income can lead to more pollution rich
    people and rich countries consume more and thus
    can generate more pollution.

16
  • However, as people and societies get richer,
    their preferences change.
  • Environment regarded as a luxury good for poor
    people who are struggling with starvation,
    environmental issues take a backseat. As people
    become richer, quality of the environment becomes
    important to them.

17
What is Economics?
  • Economics is the study of how and why individuals
    and groups make decisions about the use and
    distribution of valuable human and nonhuman
    resources.
  • Economics is divided into
  • Microeconomics the study of the behavior of
    individuals and small groups
  • Macroeconomics the study of the economic
    performance of economies as a whole.

18
What is Environmental Economics?
  • Environmental economics draw from both sides,
    much more from microeconomics.
  • Environmental economics focuses on
  • how and why people make decisions that have
    consequences for natural environment
  • how economic institutions and policies can be
    changed to bring these environmental impacts back
    to balance.

19
What is Environmental Economics?
  • The application of the principles of economics to
    study of how environmental resources are managed.
  • Analytical subjects not only to describe the
    state of the environment and the change in it,
    but also to understand why this conditions exist
    and how we might bring about improvement the
    environmental quality.

20
What is Environmental Economics?
  • Environmental economics applied field like
    labour economics, health economics, development
    economics, experimental economics, financial
    economics, monetary economics etc.
  • Environmental economics involves
  • adapting concepts developed in other branches of
    economics and applying them to environmental
    problems.

21
Why study Environmental Economics?
  • In general, prices reflect the relative scarcity
    of goods.
  • In environmental economics, markets and prices do
    not exist (or market failure).
  • There is no market for environmental resources
  • Government intervention is need to correct such
    failures (Conventional Approach)

22
Aspects of Environmental/ Natural Resources
  • No market
  • Dynamics
  • Irreversibility

23
Aspects of Environmental/ Natural Resources
  • No market (Market failure)
  • We usually rely on markets to match producer
    costs with consumer demands so as to obtain the
    optimal amount of consumer goods.
  • With environmental goods, more difficult.
  • Why? markets may not work.

24
Aspects of Environmental/ Natural Resources
  • Dynamic
  • The decision to use natural resources today does
    affect what will be available tomorrow
  • Irreversibility
  • Damage to natural resources has long term
    effects. If we clear the forest, the future
    generation will unable to know about the
    biodiversity.

25
Topics to be covered in this class
  • Externalities
  • Need for Environmental Regulation
  • Choice among Policy Instruments
  • Measuring Benefits and Costs from Pollution
    Control
  • Methods to Value Environmental Goods
  • Trade and Environment, Development and
    Environment.
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