Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus 13 pptx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_2 docx

Quantitative Economics How sustainable are our economies by Peter Bartelmus_2 docx

... ecological economics by taking in environmental economics and sustainable development in an easy-to-read introduction. The Ecological Economics journal of the International Society for Ecological Economics ... questionable. 2.3.2.2 Natural Resource Economics Environmental CGE models typically ignore natural resource depletion. The reason might be the separate development of nat...

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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 ... statistics developed and promoted by the United Nations. Further Reading 83 Box 4.6 A reductionist view SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ⇓ SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC GROWTH ⇓ ENVIRONMENTALLY SUST...

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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 ... obliteration of income generated by natural resource exploitation: ‘Countries with marketable natural resources are evidently better off than those without such resources’. His method...

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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

... (1987) g 98.5–99.6 Source: Bartelmus (1997b, table 1) and updates. Original sources: China: Akita and Nakamura (2000); Costa Rica: Solórzano et al. (1991); Germany: Bartelmus (2002); Mexico: ... 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 p...

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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

... 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 welfare generated ... in this regard over their corporate counterparts: they are less confined by accountancy laws and rules, they are not directly affected by their own calculations, and their macroe...

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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 ... natural resource stocks or degrading environmental sinks, threatens the sustainability of economic activities. The key questions, asked repeatedly in this book, are how close are thes...

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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

... environmental sinks and (re)sources are sometimes considered to be public goods (in the public domain): in general, however, only produced (usually by the government) such goods are deemed to be public. ... land and landscape conservation. Most positive effects are however intentional, marked by a plus (+) sign in segment II of the table. By definition, external effects have...

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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

... http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ referenceworks/012176480X. Bartelmus, P. (2007). SEEA-2003: Accounting for sustainable development? Ecological Economics, 61(4), 613 616. Bartelmus, P., Albert, J., & Tschochohei, ... and environmental resources. Environmental and Resource Economics, 1 , 1–15. Index 311 Economic Accounting and Corporate environmental accounting Environmental as...

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How sustainable are our economies_2 pot

How sustainable are our economies_2 pot

... Environmental Indicators (See Colour Plates) Source: Globus Infografic GmbH. Period Ecology, thermodyna - mics Ecological economics (Neo)classical economics Environmental economics Sustainable development 1750 1800 1850 1900 1950 2000 Quesnay (1759) Smith (1776) Malthus (1798) v. ... neo-liberal laissez-faire economics castigated preference for formalistic rigour over real-world vi...

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How sustainable are our economies_5 pptx

How sustainable are our economies_5 pptx

... of the economics of climate change’ might have succeeded in doing this by monetizing the different, mostly non-comparable environmental effects of global warming. However, the review shows some ... view overlooks, however, that ● Rich countries achieved some of their environmental successes by depleting the natural resources of developing countries and, in some cases, by transloc...

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