Topic6 Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of Exhaustible Resources

A

Exhaustible resources are natural resources:

  • Not renewable
  • Produced by geological processes over millions of years
  • Examples include: oil, coal, natural gas, and minerals (e.g., copper, nickel).
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2
Q

Hotelling Rule (1931)

A

The Hotelling Rule explains:

  • Resource owners balance current extraction profits with future value.
  • Prices increase over time to ensure returns match the interest rate (r).
  • Rent (profit) = price - extraction cost.
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3
Q

Key Cases in Resource Management

A

Three scenarios for resource management:

  • Stock remains untouched
  • Sell entire stock immediately
  • Equilibrium: No arbitrage, balancing extraction and preservation.
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4
Q

Story of a Mine Owner

A

Mine owner’s optimisation dilemma:

  • Extract now for immediate profit vs conserve for future value.
  • Influenced by:
    • Resource stock constraints
    • Future price expectations
    • Interest (discount) rate.
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5
Q

Effects of Substitution

A

Substitution between inputs (e.g., capital & resources):

  • No substitution: Output limited to the smaller input quantity.
  • Perfect substitution: Inputs fully interchangeable.
  • Intermediate: Sustainability depends on investment and substitution.
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6
Q

Dynamic Equilibrium in Hotelling Rule

A

Dynamic equilibrium:

  • Resource owners are indifferent between extracting now or later.
  • Prices must rise over time to equalise returns between extraction and savings.
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7
Q

Role of Extraction Costs

A

Including extraction costs modifies Hotelling Rule:

  • Net profit = Price - Marginal extraction cost.
  • Growth rate of net profit aligns with the interest rate.
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8
Q

Impact of Backstop Technology

A

Backstop technology provides a substitute for resources when prices are too high:

  • Marginal cost of this technology sets a price ceiling.
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9
Q

Resource Pricing in Monopoly

A
  • Prices set above marginal revenue (static).
  • Resource paths can match perfect competition under dynamic conditions.

I don’t fully understand the second point

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10
Q

Elasticity of Substitution

A

Elasticity of substitution determines how easily non-renewable resources can be replaced by other inputs:

  • High elasticity supports sustainability.
  • Low elasticity increases reliance on finite resources.
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