How sustainable are our economies 15 potx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_4 potx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_4 potx

... in the above-mentioned examples show progress or regress in the particular areas they represent. They do not show the relative significance of any specific area or target. The reason is incomparability ... population) 1990 2000 2 015 1990 2000 2 015 Urban 94 95 96.5 [97.5] 81 85 91 [92.5] Rural 64 71 81.5 [85.5] 28 40 58 [70] Note: 2 015: linear extrapolation; target values in brackets. S...
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Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_8 potx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_8 potx

... b Oil and gas depletion only. c Subsoil resources only. Source: Table 8.1. 10.1 Welfare Secured? Dematerialized? Capital Maintained? 187 Figure 10.3 compares the inverted (total) pollution coefficients ... Welfare (MEW), the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) or the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) supposedly indicate past and, by extrapolation, future trends of economic welf...
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Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_2 docx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_2 docx

... Earth (http://www.foe.co.uk/pdf /sustainable_ development/ tworld/summary.pdf), and the Fair Share Initiative (http://www.fairshareinterna- tional.org/) advocate a fair share of this space for countries ... I.1. ● Compare the main schools of eco–nomics. What are their sustainability notions? Why and how do environmental and ecological economists differ in dealing with environmental imp...
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Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_6 pdf

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_6 pdf

... increasingly on foreign resources (op. cit.). Globalization, together with domestic resource depletion, are significant factors in this outsourcing of natural resource supply (Section 14.1). 6.3.3 ... exchange rates. Source: Bringezu (2002, fig. 2.3). 6.3 Material Flow Accounting 115 Plate 6.3 Material flows through the economy (See Colour Plates) Source: S. Bringezu (2000). Ressourcennu...
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Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_7 docx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_7 docx

... and other resource taxes as a significant source of governmental property income (shown in the primary income distribution accounts) ● The acquisition of tradable emission and resource use permits ... Pearce (1994); USA: Landefeld and Howell (1998). Notes: a EDP 1 is NDP, adjusted for natural resource depletion only. b EDP 2 is NDP, adjusted for natural resource depletion and environmen...
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Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_10 doc

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_10 doc

... non-declining welfare generation. In fact, if the welfare package is broad enough, non-decline of welfare can also be viewed as sustainable development (Mäler, 1991). Note however that the search ... share the effects of cost-pushed price increase with consumers. At the international level, shared responsibility for outsourcing hazardous production processes and importing natural resou...
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Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_12 ppt

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_12 ppt

... cost-absorbing production behaviour of the enterprise. As pointed out by Baumol and Oates (1971), an iterative process of 266 15 Questions, Questions, Questions – and Some Answers 15. 3 How Bad Is It? Assessing ... this book. To this end, one can either look back and ask how bad it has been, or look forward and see how bad (or good) it will be. 15. 3.1 How Bad Has It Been? The e...
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Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_13 pptx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_13 pptx

... profiles 189 Environmentally adjusted net Domestic Product 151 , 157 , 158 , 161–162 Environmentally adjusted net Capital Formation 152 , 153 , 157 , 158 , 162, 186 Environmentally weighted Material Consumption ... (WCED) (1987). Our common future. Oxford: Oxford University Press. World Resources Institute (WRI) (1992). World resources 1992–93. New York and Oxford: Oxford Univer...
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How sustainable are our economies_7 potx

How sustainable are our economies_7 potx

... increasingly on foreign resources (op. cit.). Globalization, together with domestic resource depletion, are significant factors in this outsourcing of natural resource supply (Section 14.1). 6.3.3 ... sites, are indirect indicators of preferences for environmental amenities. The closeness of welfare valuations to economic (utility/welfare maximizing) theory makes these valuations the...
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How sustainable are our economies_15 potx

How sustainable are our economies_15 potx

... Accounting 133–135, 141, 148 asset boundary 133–135 case studies 155 159 Germany 158 159 , 285–287 history 141–142, 165–166 indicators 148, 151 153 , 161–162 see also Environmentally adjusted net Domestic ... holder. 320 Colour Plates Plate 2.2 Hans Carl von Carlowitz (1645–1714) 322 Colour Plates Plate 5.1 Overlay mapping: global warming and precipitation effects Source: UNEP/GRID-Arend...
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