环境与自然资源经济学教师手册M09_TIET1380_08_IM_C.pdf
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1、Chapter 9 Recyclable Resources:Minerals,Bottles,and E-waste Chapter 9 examines trash disposal,pollution damages from disposal,factors mitigating resource scarcity,and recycling.Efficient markets for recyclable resources are described.An examination of disposal costs and public policies to encourage
2、recycling are discussed.Reducing,reusing,and recycling are the themes.1.Discuss the relationship between the demand for virgin ores and the demand for recycled materials.2.Define efficient recycling.3.Discuss the factors that reduce resource scarcity.4.Discuss the market imperfections in the market
3、choices between recycling and the use of virgin ores.5.Discuss the damages from e-waste.6.Discuss issues related to pollution damages from waste disposal.7.Outline economic incentives to internalize damage costs such as volume charges and returnable deposits.I.An Efficient Allocation of Recyclable R
4、esources A.Virgin ores are usually cheapest and thus used first.B.As natural inputs become scarce relative to demand,the demand for recycled materials should rise.C.Disposal costs rise with rising wealth and with increasing population densities.D.As the costs of disposal rise,recycling rates should
5、also be increased.E.As land has become more scarce and thus,valuable,the burial of wastes is becoming increasingly expensive.Concerns over contamination of groundwater from buried waste has also made landfill disposal less attractive.F.Box Example 9.2 illustrates how the market should work using lea
6、d recycling as a case study.G.The composition-of-demand effect suggests that,as long as quality is not adversely affected,consumers will shift to materials made of recycled products if products made with virgin materials are more expensive.50 Tietenberg/Lewis Environmental and Natural Resource Econo
7、mics,Eighth Edition H.Consumers will have additional incentives to recycle materials if they also bear the cost of disposal.I.If there is little or no market for the recycled materials or if the supply of recyclables is increased to the point that prices drop severely,returning products to recycling
8、 centers will have little effect on total recycling.J.Some materials are easier to recycle(e.g.,aluminum),while others are contaminated with impurities(e.g.,plastics)and are harder to recycle.K.Transport,labor,and processing costs are usually significant and play a large role in overall recycling ra
9、tes.L.As recycling becomes more cost competitive,however,manufacturers should rely more heavily on recycled inputs.M.Some manufacturers are facilitating recycling through product design.For example,some aircraft manufacturers and ski boot manufacturers will stamp parts with a code to identify the co
10、mposition of recyclable materials.N.In terms of the switch point introduced in the previous chapter,if the resource can be recycled at a marginal cost lower than that of the substitute,the market will likely use the recyclable resource longer than it would the non-recyclable resource.O.With a stock
11、of A,a recovery rate of a,and an infinite time period,the amount made available by recycling will be A/(1 a).If a 0,the resource is non-recyclable.The effect of recycling is to increase the availability of the resource.II.Factors Mitigating Resource Scarcity Recycling is affected by resource scarcit
12、y,hence it is important to study those variables that affect resource scarcity.Market economies typically rely on three coping alternatives to mitigate the adverse consequences of resource scarcity:(1)exploration and discovery,(2)technological progress,and(3)substitution.A.Exploration and Discovery
13、1.A profit-maximizing firm will continue to explore until the marginal discovery cost of exploration equals the marginal scarcity rent from a unit of the resource sold.2.The marginal scarcity rent equals the difference between the price received and the marginal cost of extraction.This is essentiall
14、y the marginal benefit of exploration,and thus profit maximization entails equating marginal benefit to marginal cost.3.Income growth and population growth both cause demand for the resource to rise over time.Rising demand causes both the marginal user cost and the scarcity rent to rise.Producers wi
15、ll then have incentives to take on larger marginal discovery costs.4.Increases in scarcity rents will stimulate large amounts of exploration if the marginal discovery cost curve is flat and less exploration if the marginal discovery cost curve is steep.The relative steepness depends on the number of
16、 available resources.B.Technological Progress 1.Technological progress reduces the cost of ore.2.Rising extraction costs stimulate the development of new technologies.3.The rate and type of technological progress are influenced by the degree of resource scarcity.4.New technologies can focus on using
17、 more capital or more labor depending on which is more abundant.Population growth could result in new technologies that rely more on labor.Chapter 9 Recyclable Resources:Minerals,Bottles,and E-waste 51 C.Substitution 1.Figure 9.1 illustrates the effect of substituting abundant resources for scarce r
18、esources.The greater the ease of substitution,the smaller the impact of rising costs and reduced availability will be.2.Figure 9.1 uses isoquants to illustrate the above point.An isoquant shows all the possible combinations of inputs that can produce a given output.3.Fixed-proportions isoquants are
19、right-angled because no input substitutability is possible.Reduction in one input requires a reduction in output.4.The isoquant S1 shows a case for which substitutability is possible.Reduction in one input,does not require reduced output level,but requires a substitution of more of the other input.5
20、.The more substitution possibilities that are available,the smaller the impact resource scarcity will have on output.6.Box Example 9.1 examines these issues with respect to timber.Technological progress has had a large effect on resource development as well as resource substitution.III.Market Imperf
21、ections,Waste Disposal,and Pollution Damage A.An unbalanced treatment of waste by products and consumers can lead to biases in the market choices between recycling and the use of virgin ores.B.If an economic agent does not bear the full cost of disposal,the agent will be biased toward the use of vir
22、gin materials and away from recycling.C.The avoided marginal cost of disposal is considered a marginal benefit from recycling.This amount must be included in recycling decisions.Thus both marginal disposal costs and the prices of recycled materials will affect the efficient level of recycling.D.Recy
23、clable waste comes from either new scrap or old scrap.New scrap is residual material from a production process while old scrap is recovered from used products.E.Recycling of new scrap is less problematic since it does not have to be transported and can usually be easily reentered into the input stre
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