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Economics of Conservation
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Economics of Conservation

Dec 31, 2015

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harding-herman

Economics of Conservation. Economics - Basic. Economics is a tool which helps us answer 3 basic questions: 1. What commodities should be produced and in what quantity? 2. How should we produce those goods? and 3. For whom should we produce those goods?. Descriptive Economics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Economics of Conservation

Economics of Conservation

Page 2: Economics of Conservation

Economics - Basic

Economics is a tool which helps us answer 3 basic questions:

1. What commodities should be produced and in what quantity?

2. How should we produce those goods? and

3. For whom should we produce those goods?

Page 3: Economics of Conservation

Descriptive Economics

• The description of economic facts and relationships falls under the category of descriptive economics - it is relatively speaking, a pure science and is objective and its questions can only be answered by facts

Page 4: Economics of Conservation

Normative Economics

• Normative Economics addresses questions that cannot be answered by facts and figures - where there are no right and wrong answers but rather questions of “should” or “ought”, instead they are questions about value judgments and must be decided by social and political processes

Page 5: Economics of Conservation

Two Basic Economic Systems

1. Command economy in which the government dictates production and distribution goals

2. In a market economy companies generally produce goods and services which produce the highest profit thus answering the first question of what to produce and how much. Profit also dictates how goods are produced. For whom is answered by ability to pay.

Page 6: Economics of Conservation

Elephant Ivory for Sale

Page 7: Economics of Conservation

Oil Prices

Page 8: Economics of Conservation

BFI Monopoly?

Page 9: Economics of Conservation

External Cost

• External Cost, a cost to society not paid by the manufacturer or its customers

Page 10: Economics of Conservation

External Costs

Page 11: Economics of Conservation

External Costs?

Page 12: Economics of Conservation

Cost Benefit Analysis

• marginal cost of pollution - added cost to all present and future members of society of an additional unit of pollution

• marginal cost of pollution abatement - added cost to all present and future members of society of reducing a given type of pollution by one unit

Page 13: Economics of Conservation

Richmond, California

Page 14: Economics of Conservation

Wetlands and Flood Control