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Endogenous Growth and Property Rights over Renewable Resources

Publication ,  Scholarly Edition
Suphaphiphat, N; Peretto, PF; Valente, S
2015

We study how different regimes of access rights to renewable natural resources – namely open access versus full property rights – affect sustainability, growth and welfare in the context of modern endogenous growth theory. Resource exhaustion may occur under both regimes but is more likely to arise under open access. Moreover, under full property rights, positive resource rents increase expenditures on manufacturing goods and temporarily accelerate productivity growth, but also yield a higher resource price at least in the short-to-medium run. We characterize analytically and quantitatively the model׳s dynamics to assess the welfare implications of differences in property rights enforcement.

Duke Scholars

Publication Date

2015

Start / End Page

125 / 151
 

Citation

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Suphaphiphat, N., Peretto, P. F., & Valente, S. (2015). Endogenous Growth and Property Rights over Renewable Resources.
Suphaphiphat, N., P. F. Peretto, and S. Valente. “Endogenous Growth and Property Rights over Renewable Resources,” 2015.
Suphaphiphat N, Peretto PF, Valente S. Endogenous Growth and Property Rights over Renewable Resources. 2015. p. 125–51.
Suphaphiphat, N., et al. Endogenous Growth and Property Rights over Renewable Resources. 2015, pp. 125–51.
Suphaphiphat N, Peretto PF, Valente S. Endogenous Growth and Property Rights over Renewable Resources. 2015. p. 125–151.

Publication Date

2015

Start / End Page

125 / 151