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I. Development-environment interactions

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Components of environmental trends: Industrial emissions and air/water pollution flows ... Indirect and loop back' effects can be very important ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: I. Development-environment interactions


1
I. Development-environment interactions
  1. Data on growth, development and environment
  2. Development-environment interactions
  3. The EKC

2
Growth and structural change
  • Economic expansion
  • Sectoral changes in production and resource
    allocation
  • Changes in relative prices (Engel effects)
  • Changes in relative factor endowments
  • Differences in technical progress rates
  • Contribution of policy reforms, investment and
    trade in globalizing economies

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Summary
  • Growth itself increases environmental pressures
  • Structural changes alter these
  • In globalizing economies, policy reforms and
    investment flows may make crucial contributions

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Environmental trends
  • Drivers economic growth, population growth,
    and changes in economic structure, including
    those from policy reforms
  • Components of environmental trends
  • Industrial emissions and air/water pollution
    flows
  • Natural resource depletion

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Summary of env. trends
  • Rapid growth and changing econ. structure is
    associated with
  • Increases in (urban) air and water pollution
  • Continued rapid deforestation and depletion of
    soil and water resources
  • These trends have consequences that are local,
    national and even global in nature

16
Valuation of env. damages
  • Difficult to define and measure, let alone value
    environmental degradation
  • Estimates of adjusted NDP usually fall below
    measured NDP.
  • ANDP NDP less net depletion (cf. depreciation)
    of environmental capital
  • E.g. Indonesia (WRI 1989) Growth of NDP 7 per
    year growth of ANDP only 4 per yr.

17
Valuation and policy
  • Although aggregate values such as ANDP may be
    large, those for individual environmental
    phenomena are less so.
  • Challenge for env. economists is then to convince
    policy-makers that sacrifices for env. purposes
    are worth it.
  • This requires complete and careful accounting
    methods, inclusive of indirect costs benefits
    (e.g. double dividend arguments)

18
Development and environment in LDCs
  • Economic growth in developing economies incurs
    high environmental costs.
  • Initial conditions resource-dependent, capital
    poor countries.
  • Legacy of economic growth strategies
  • Import-substituting industrialisation
  • Agricultural development policies

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  • Global research has focused on industrial
    emissions, but in LDCs most problems concern nat.
    res. degradation
  • their severity and interaction with economic
    processes differs sharply from that of
    pollutants
  • (Jha and Whalley 1999)
  • Growth policy reforms have very different
    implications for pollution and for NR depletion
    and degradation

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  • As countries globalize there is an apparent
    increase in the rate at which resource depletion
    environmental damage occurs.
  • Is globalization responsible for ENR depletion?
  • Is env. damage increasing linearly, or will
    problems solve themselves in time?
  • Are LDCs the same as now-cleaner rich
    countries?
  • Policy/project solutions for NR degradation are
    typically defined within same geog. bounds as
    problems--and often fail.
  • Proximate causes of deforestation (population
    growth and agricultural intensification in
    fragile ecosystems) are in fact endogenous

21
The grammar of policy arguments
  • Few arguments on growth, globalization and
    environment have consistent microeconomic
    foundations.
  • Need both positive analyses (what is happening,
    and why?), and normative analyses (what should be
    done?).
  • The scope of analysis (what is endogenous?) must
    be as broad as possible.

TOC
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I. Development-environment interactions
23
The environmental Kuznets curve
  • With economic growth, pollution intensity first
    rises, then declines
  • z z(Y/P)
  • z gt 0 z lt 0.

24
Components of EKC
  • Scale effect (economic expansion)
  • Composition effects
  • Relative price changes
  • Unbalanced growth-- from several sources
  • Technique preference effects
  • Production technology
  • Consumer preferences policy pressures

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Is there an EKC in Asia?
  • Empirical studies
  • Industrial emissions-- maybe.
  • Deforestation, water and soil resource
    depletion--no robust evidence of EKC.
  • Yet experience of wealthy countries suggests that
    EKC concept remains a useful working hypothesis.

26
Factors affecting EKC shape
  • Exogenous market influences (globalization)
  • Property rights
  • Externalities
  • Policy accidents (e.g ISI strategies affecting
    indl ag growth)
  • All have economy-wide implications
  • Spatial dimensions may also be important

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Methodological approaches
  • Economy-wide mechanisms require general
    equilibrium techniques
  • Methods must also capture key elements of real
    world conditions
  • Trade and intersectoral market integration
  • Spatial dimensions of pollution
  • Institutional and policy dimensions

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A note on micro vs. macro approaches
  • Agents behavior (e.g. firm/farm) is dynamically
    linked to macro level changes.
  • Economy-wide or global changes affect decision-
    making by micro units, through prices, etc.
  • Behaviour of micro-units in aggregate affects
    macro outcomes outputs, prices, employment,
    income distribution, and environmental
    externalities
  • Indirect and loop back effects can be very
    important
  • Micro and macro approaches are complementary.
    Both are required.
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