global commons and their management urs luterbacher
TRANSCRIPT
Global Commons and their Management
Urs Luterbacher
What are commons sometimes also called common pool
resources?• Commons are an ambiguous notion• They can mean resources belonging to – No one and thus to whoever has access to
them– To several owners. There may or may not be
complex ownership and use rules• The term takes its origins from land in
medieval communities that was open to most people in them
• It also applies now to international spaces and resources: Oceans, the Atmosphere, Antarctica
The Antarctica Common
Why study commons?• One can show that in the long run open
access type commons lead to overuse unless some regulatory mechanism is used
• The tragedy of the commons! Many aspects• They lead to un-sustainability: Ownership
problem and market failure• This is true for local as well as global
commons• How can this problem be tackled
analytically? Does it take several forms? What does it lead to?
• What are the solutions? Are these different locally, regionally and globally? What are the instruments to be used?
• Global commons raise specific problems
Environment, economy, polity
• One often hears that the environment, the economy, the political system obey fundamentally different logics
• Is this correct?• Intuition tells us after some thinking that this is
not the case: There is no economy without ecology, no political system without an economic system
• Moreover, the economic system and the political system feedback on the environment: Early agricultural kingdoms of the Mid-East, system collapses, conflict about resources
Private goods, externalities, and public goods
• Clearly an analytical framework is needed to study the relationships between these 3 aspects and to put them under a common (no pun intended) roof
• For convenience sake we will use the framework used originally by economists but then taken over by political scientists and resource analysts: Different kinds of goods
• Private goods: While my preferences or well-being depends on what I purchase, it does not depend on what others purchase
• Public goods: When I purchase units of it I can not keep others from consume it as well or sometimes common consumption desirable (non excludability)
• Public goods lead then to externalities good or bad!!
Collective goods and institutions• Collective (public) goods are then up to a point
non exclusive and some of them are non-rival• They can lead to peculiar behavior such as
free riding and the exploitation of the strong by the weak
• Some collective goods are semi exclusive and called club goods, some are rival and called commons (negative externalities)
• Commons often are related to “fugitive” goods• All public goods require institutional settings in
the form of coalitions• These modify incentives and behavior
The Tragedy of the Commons and its Solutions
• The tragedy notion is due to the work of Hardin (1968)
• It represents an open access field situation in which every participant has an incentive to put more and more animals for grazing
• The Hardin common represents individual gains but shared common losses as the field gets to be totally overgrazed
• Under the circumstances, the grass is a fugitive resource that everybody has an incentive to grab before the other!
The Tragedy: A rigorous analysis
• Hardin’s analysis is verbal and kind of loose• He does not consider the costs associated with
herding itself• His strategic analysis is vague and has led to a
lot of confusion in the literature• His analysis of solutions to the problem he is
investigating is limited and imprecise• He only evokes property rights solutions• Nevertheless, his general conclusions are
correct if commons are associated with open access
Commons: A correct representation
All commons or common pool resource management problems do not necessarily lead to overuse (cf. Ostrom)
Gordon Schaefer Model: Another way of saying the
same
Cost curveModified cost curve
Strategic aspects
• Strategic aspects of the common will depend on what agents anticipate about each other
• Do they have means of retaliating for damage? Not in open access common
• Their behavior is conditioned by others and the importance of moving first
The Instruments and the Debate around them
• What is an instrument?• It is a policy measure that is
supposed to correct for the presence of negative externalities
• Corrections are in principle only needed if negative externalities are present or if market mechanisms do not work in particular circumstances
Instruments and efficiency
• Instruments are there to induce agents to maximize the scarcity rent
• This implies a control of the number of producers/users and a control of what they produce use if it leads to negative externalities
• Production is “naturally” efficient even in the physical sense if the Hotelling rule is followed: example energy inputs
• The externality is not energy per se but the negative externalities associated with its uses, e.g. greenhouse gas emissions
Market for externalities solution
Instruments of solution
Taxation
Pigouvian Tax Solution
• The Pigouvian tax “taxes” the externality away
• If the political system is benevolent and completely informed, good solution although with a long term dynamic problem
• Has distributional impacts• Can be counterproductive if mixed with
different property rights systems (Chichilnisky)
Property rights solutions
• Advantages stressed by Coase• Externalities can be bargained away• Not always possible because of
information problems• Property rights may emerge
spontaneously (Demsetz)• Problem: Monitoring and transaction
costs
Market Solutions: The Lindahl Equilibrium
• Rights and share of rights can be established and traded via a competitive price
• The price p represents a rate of transformation from the private good into a public good
• A price equilibrium based upon these principles is called a Lindahl equilibrium
Lindahl equlibrium graphic:
• Problem:• Incentive to cheatby misrepresentingpreferences
Commons and Trade
• The question of the commons becomes particularly important within the environment trade issue
• Trade between regulated and unregulated regions can lead to environmental problems
Trade and Environment• From a general point of view, trade
and the environment should be neutral with respect to each other
• Problems come from the different political social and legal structures between countries
• These lead to either advantageous or problematic relationships between the two
Positive and negative effects
• Environmental conditions can be positively affected by trade liberalization
• Positive effects can result from the suppression of distortions which have all kinds of costs including environmental ones
• Other legislation than trade legislation might create distortions: environmental standards
• A market economy and this is due for trade as well can work optimally only if some structural conditions are similar such as property rights
• To make all this explicit lets look at trade theories
Property Rights, the Environment and Trade
• Changes in the Economic Theory of Trade• Traditional Theory Based on the Notion of
Comparative Advantage: Heckscher Olin• 2 New Notions:• Importance of Increasing Returns to Scale
and Intra-Industry Trade (Helpman, Krugman, Ethier, etc.)
• Importance of availability of a factor and factor prices (Chichilnisky)
Characteristics of Trade
• Importance of increasing returns in • External aspects• Monopolistic competition
• Some property rights regimes lower the price of factor inputs• Countries with ill-defined property rights
extract too many natural resources• They have thus an "artificial" comparative
advantage in environmental goods
The Chichilnisky Perspective
• Chichilnisky (1994) has analyzed trade links between regions with different property rights
• Basic conclusions are drawn from her investigation:• The region with undefined property
rights will supply more of a resource at any price
• This applies to any good that is "fugitive": rights of ownership established only when captured or freely extractable
Open access and “private” supply
Chichilnisky Perspective• Apparent "abundance" of resources
when no or ill-defined property rights• Region "appears" to have a
comparative advantage in the given resource.
• Abundance not due to any intrinsic natural availability of the resource but reflects absence of rights.
• Region without property rights gets poorer because it divests its resources at too low a price.
Chichilnisky: Analysis• Assumptions about regions without well
defined property rights:• Elasticity of substitution between leisure and
consumption for harvesters or extractors of the resource good is lower than 1
• Extractors consume mostly other goods than the natural resource that are purchased with their harvest or catch
• An increase of the relative price of other goods with respect to the resource will result in more extraction
Consequences• Regions with ill-defined property rights are
"exploited" by those with well defined rights.• Resultant lower prices lead to increasingly
unfavorable terms of trade followed by more extraction of the resource
• Thus regions with poorly defined property rights grow poorer as a result of trade with regions with better defined property rights
• More important, corrective taxes are counterproductive: lower demand and lower prices lead to more extraction
Analysis of Countries with Ill-Defined Property Rights
• These countries are sensitive to price fluctuations due to substitution effects or taxation policies
• Lower prices lead to more extraction of natural resources due to a lowering of the opportunity cost of labor
• This lowers their bargaining power at the international level
• Their bargaining power is lowered further by the cost of the artificial "comparative advantage" in terms of natural resources on the society as a whole which might lead to social upheavals.