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Homework #9 Thursday Quiz #4 Group Outline due today Exam #4 Dec. 1 Group Presentations Dec. 6 & 8.
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Open-access regulations (permits, taxes, technology restrictions) and limited- entry regulations(ITQs, private ownership) are both intended to reduce the problems that result from unregulated open access to a fishery. However, economists argue that limited-access regulations are preferred to open-access regulations on efficiency grounds. Explain why.
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Explain why the characteristics of timber make it both an output and capital good.
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Graph the growth curve of timber. What the factors that affect this growth curve?
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Explain the criterion used to determine the optimal age to harvest a stand of trees.
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison- Wesley. All rights reserved. 13-6
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How do an increase in the following affect the optimal harvest age? Planting costs Harvesting costs Per-unit tax on harvesting
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Interdependences Applying single-harvest model may not be so simple Single-harvest model, harvest when marginal benefit of an additional year’s growth = marginal opportunity cost of capital Infinite-planning model, you examine the optimal length of harvest and replanting (“Optimal Rotation”). Length of each period affects the benefits in the next period The opportunity cost of delay is the benefit from the next best alternative (harvesting and replanting).
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All else constant, the optimal rotation in the infinite-planning case is shorter than in the single-harvest case. The marginal cost of delay is higher since there is now an opportunity cost of starting the next cycle later. Thus, the optimal rotation is shorter.
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Suppose there are two identical forest plots except that one will be harvested and left while the second will be cleared after the harvest and turned into a housing development. In terms of efficiency, which one should have the oldest harvest age? Why?
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Opportunity costs are the forgone benefits from the next best alternative Marginal cost of delay is the forgone benefits from harvesting and replanting for the next period. The net benefits in the next period depend on the planting costs and the harvesting cost.
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Occurs when the marginal cost of delay equals the marginal benefit of delay. How do an increase in the following affect the optimal rotation age? Planting costs Harvesting costs Per-unit tax on harvesting
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The value of a standing forest as wildlife habitat or ecosystem function is an external cost. Failure to recognize social values will result in inefficiencies. External costs of timber harvesting may not be adequately considered by the private landowner. Deforestation involves transboundary or global externalities. Biodiversity: deforestation is a major source of species loss. Many benefits of species preservation are external to the country with the forest. (Biodiversity vs. genetic diversity) Climate change: deforestation contributes to climate change, but the benefits of leaving the trees standing are largely external. The costs, however, are largely internal.
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Government policies can also create perverse incentives Brazil government gave agricultural tax-break Government resettlement programs have also encouraged deforestation by facilitating the movement of migrants into agriculture. Squatter rights encourage deforestation Allpahuayo-Mishana National Reserve in the Peruvian Amazon Market conditions can encourage the transition from forests to agriculture
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