116-04
Universität Siegen
Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Wirtschaftsinformatik und Wirtschaftsrecht
Volkswirtschaftliche Diskussionsbeiträge
Thomas Eichner und Rüdiger Pethig
Economic
land use, ecosystem services and microfounded species dynamics
In an integrated
economy-ecosystem model humans choose their land use and leave the residual
land as habitat for three species forming a food chain. The size of habitat
determines the diversity and abundance of species. That biodiversity generates,
in turn, a flow of ecosystem services with public-good characteristics
for human consumption. The ecosystem submodel yields (rather than assumes!)
population growth functions with each species' growth depending on the
size of habitat. First the relationship between habitat and species growth
(sustenance, decline and extinction) is explored. The laissez-faire economy
is shown to result in an underprovision of habitat making the case for
land use restrictions for nature protection. The optimal land use policy
is characterized with full regard of ecosystem dynamics. Finally, labor-augmenting
technical change is introduced to generate ever increasing pressure towards
further habitat reductions. In the laissez-faire economy the habitat is
consequently squeezed to zero in the long-run so that all species are
doomed. Social optimality demands, however, to refrain from using all
land for economic purposes despite ever growing labor productivity.
Download paper