14
Natural Resource Economics The Simple Economics of Easter Island: A Ricardo-Malthus Model of Renewable Resource Use Brander, J.A. & Taylor, M.S.

Easter Island

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Easter Island

Natural Resource Economics

The Simple Economics of Easter Island:

A Ricardo-Malthus Model of Renewable Resource

Use

Brander, J.A. & Taylor, M.S.

Page 2: Easter Island

Objectives

1.Study a pattern of:

Economic andPopulation Growth

ResourceDegradation

Economic Decline

2. Construct a model linking population dynamics and renewable resource dynamics

3. Apply the model to the case of Easter Island

Page 3: Easter Island

Components of the Model

1. Malthusian population dynamics: increase in productivity leads to pop growth. Pop growth might overshoot productivity gains, resulting in readjustment (boom-and-bust).

2. Open-access renewable resource: no property rights established, anyone can use the resource stock freely.

3. Ricardian production structure: production function where labour and the renewable natural resource are inputs.

Page 4: Easter Island

A Short Chronology of Easter Island

● 400 AD: first settlements, between 20 and 100 people● 900 AD: evident deforestation● 1100-1400: most forest gone, soil erosion. Maoi carving.

Population peaked at around 10,000 people.● 1400-1500: falling food consumption. Maoi carving

stopped. Weaponry, conflict, cannibalism.● 1722: about 3,000 human inhabitants. Moai worshipping.● 1774: About 2,000 inhabitants. Maoi worshipping

stopped, statues pushed down (usually facedown)

Page 5: Easter Island

The Model (parameters)● Production function: labour (L) and renewable

resources (S) – ecological system of soil and forest:DS/dt = G(S) – H

● Society harvests (H) the renewable resources. Society as hunters, resources as prey.

HP = αSLH

● Due to open-access, there is no rent to depletion of S.

● Biological growth follows a logistic function.

Page 6: Easter Island

The Model (static equilibrium)

Page 7: Easter Island

The Model (dynamics equilibrium)

● As consumption increases, net fertility increases. Positive feedback effect;

● Population growth dissipates resource productivity improvements;

● Resource depletion decreases carrying capacity.

Page 8: Easter Island

Transition Dynamics

Page 9: Easter Island

The Model (results)

Page 10: Easter Island

What's different about Easter Island?● Other Polynesian island societies in the area

did not suffer such overshooting and collapse.● However, Easter Island has distinct

disadvantages:- slow growth rate of local resources- short lifespan of individuals- climate too cold- no property rights- isolation

Page 11: Easter Island

Easter Island: a “closed” system

Source: Diamond, J. (2005) Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro: Editora Record.

~2100 mi

Page 12: Easter Island

Institutional Adaptation● Various institutional decisions could help

diminish the risk of such collapses:- Correct and agreed-upon understanding of the problem- Relevant policies affect relevant parties in a similar way (cfr. Pareto)- Low discount rates- Low enforcement costs- Trust and cohesion in the community

Page 13: Easter Island

Collapse:How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed

Causes of societal collapse

1. Human impact over surrounding environment

2. Climate change (natural)

3. Increasing pressure by hostile neighbours

4. Diminished support by friendly neighbours

5. Societal response to ongoing problems

Deforestation and habitat destruction

Soil problems (erosion, salinization, and soil fertility losses)

Water management problems

Overhunting

Overfishing

Effects of introduced species on native species

Population growth

Increased per-capita impact of people

Page 14: Easter Island

Thank you all.