Table of Contents
Contents:AcknowledgementsIntroduction Elements of Environmental Macroeconomics Mohan MunasinghePART I BASIC LINKAGES AND MACRO-ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORKS1. Wassily Leontief (1970), ‘Environmental Repercussions and the Economic Structure: An Input–output Approach’2. Tjalling C. Koopmans (1973), ‘Some Observations on ‘Optimal’ Economic Growth and Exhaustible Resources’3. Joseph Stiglitz (1974), ‘Growth with Exhaustible Natural Resources: Efficient and Optimal Growth Paths’4. Robert Solow (1993), ‘An Almost Practical Step Toward Sustainability’5. Richard W. England (2000), ‘Natural Capital and the Theory of Economic Growth’6. Herman E. Daly (1991), ‘Elements of Environmental Macroeconomics’7. Messaye Girma (1992), ‘Macropolicy and the Environment: A Framework for Analysis’8. Karl-Göran Mäler and Mohan Munasinghe (1996), ‘Macroeconomic Policies, Second-best Theory, and the Environment’PART II GENERAL REVIEWS AND EMPIRICAL SURVEYS 9. Gene M. Grossman and Alan B. Krueger (1995), ‘Economic Growth and the Environment’10. J.B. Opschoor and S.M. Jongma (1996), ‘Bretton Woods Intervention Programmes and Sustainable Development’11. Theodore Panayotou and Kurt Hupé (1996), ‘Environmental Impacts of Structural Adjustment Programs: Synthesis and Recommendations’12. J.J. Kessler and M. Van Dorp (1998), ‘Structural Adjustment and the Environment: The Need for an Analytical Methodology’PART III MACROECONOMIC-ENVIRONMENTAL MODELS AND COUNTRY STUDIES13. Klaus Conrad (1999), ‘Computable General Equilibrium Models for Environmental Economics and Policy Analysis’14. Sardar M.N. Islam (2001), ‘Ecology and Optimal Economic Growth: An Optimal Ecological Economic Growth Model and Its Sustainability Implications’15. Dale W. Jorgenson and Peter J. Wilcoxen (1990), ‘Intertemporal General Equilibrium Modeling of U.S. Environmental Regulation’16. Lars Bergman (1990), ‘Energy and Environmental Constraints on Growth: A CGE Modeling Approach’17. Annika Persson and Mohan Munasinghe (1995), ‘Natural Resource Management and Economywide Policies in Costa Rica: A Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) Modeling Approach’18. Stein T. Holden, J. Edward Taylor and Stephen Hampton (1998), ‘Structural Adjustment and Market Imperfections: A Stylized Village Economy-wide Model with Non-separable Farm Households’19. Solveig Glomsrød, Maria Dolores Monge and Haakon Vennemo (1998), ‘Structural Adjustment and Deforestation in Nicaragua’PART IV INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND THE ENVIRONMENT20. Karl W. Steininger (1999), ‘General Models of Environmental Policy and Foreign Trade’21. Amitrajeet A. Batabyal (1994), ‘An Open Economy Model of the Effects of Unilateral Environmental Policy by a Large Developing Country’22. Ian Goldin and David Roland-Host (1997), ‘Economic Policies for Sustainable Resource Use in Morocco’23. Muthukumara Mani and David Wheeler (1999), ‘In Search of Pollution Havens? Dirty Industry in the World Economy, 1960–1995’PART V ENVIRONMENTAL ACCOUNTING 24. John M. Hartwick (1990), ‘Natural Resources, National Accounting and Economic Depreciation’25. Peter Bartelmus, Carsten Stahmer and Jan van Tongeren (1991), ‘Integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting: Framework for a SNA Satellite System’26. Robert Repetto, William Magrath, Michael Wells, Christine Beer and Fabrizio Rossini (1989), ‘The Need for Natural Resource Accounting’27. Lars Hultkrantz (1992), ‘National Account of Timber and Forest Environmental Resources in Sweden’28. Giles Atkinson, Richard Dubourg, Kirk Hamilton, Mohan Munasinghe, David Pearce and Carlos Young (1997), ‘Resource and Environmental Accounting’29. Thomas Aronsson and Karl-Gustaf Löfgren (1998), ‘Green Accounting: What Do We Know and What Do We Need to Know?’Name Index