Water Resource Economics
Theory, Institutions, and Applications
By Jeffrey Jordan, Jack Houston, Jeffrey Mullen
To Be Published January 21st 2014 by Routledge – 352 pages
Series: Routledge Textbooks in Environmental and Agricultural Economics
To Be Published January 21st 2014 by Routledge – 352 pages
Series: Routledge Textbooks in Environmental and Agricultural Economics
The most important issue facing how water is used and developed is that most basic of economic questions: how to allocate scarce resources among competing uses over time. Until recently, issues of supply and quality had dominated the literature on water. It was seen as a cheap commodity and analysts rarely considered the economic issues surrounding it.
Today, people are more aware of water and the need for its effective management. As population pressures affect the demand for water across North America and throughout the world, more care and management of water resources is necessary. In short, there is a need to understand the economic issues of water. The cost of water is increasing, and new thresholds of water treatment will make the economics of water increasingly important.
The purpose of this book is to develop an understanding of the role of economics in determining public policy toward water resources and to illustrate how basic economic principles can be applied to issues surrounding the allocation of water resources.
1. Introduction: Economic Concepts of Water 2. Water Planning and Water Conflicts 3. The Physical Nature of Water: Confounding Water Planning 4. The Water Supply Industry 5. Water Institutions 6. The Demand for Water: Demand Theory, Elasticity and Projections 7. Dynamic Optimization, Risk and Uncertainty 8. Water Pricing and Allocation 9. Evaluating Water Projects 10. Financial Analysis of Water Systems 11. Water Marketing 12. Water Quality and Regulations 13. Future Issues and Directions
Jeffrey L. Jordan is Professor in the Agricultural and Applied Economics Department at the University of Georgia. He is the co-author of Water Allocations in the Southeast: New Uses, New Methods, New Models published by the University Press of Florida.
Jack E. Houston is Professor of Agricultural and Applied Economics and Adjunct Professor of Housing and Consumer Economics at the University of Georgia.
Jeffrey D. Mullen is Associate Professor of Agricultural and Applied Economics at the University of Georgia.
Name: Water Resource Economics: Theory, Institutions, and Applications (Paperback) – Routledge
Description: By Jeffrey Jordan, Jack Houston, Jeffrey Mullen. The most important issue facing how water is used and developed is that most basic of economic questions: how to allocate scarce resources among competing uses over time. Until recently, issues of supply and quality had dominated the literature on water...
Categories: Environmental Economics, Environmental Studies, Rural Development, Agriculture & Environmental Sciences, Development Economics, Environment & Resources, Environmental Politics