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    Stern, David I. 2018. The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics. p. 3697.

    Coppola, Adele and Ianuario, Sara 2017. Environmental and social sustainability in Producer Organizations’ strategies. British Food Journal, Vol. 119, Issue. 8, p. 1732.

    Adigüzel, Yekbun Flomenbom, Ophir and Coban, Gul Unal 2017. From the Physiocrats to Fairness in Nations. Reports in Advances of Physical Sciences, Vol. 01, Issue. 01, p. 1750001.

    Hahnel, Robin 2017. Environmental Sustainability in a Sraffian Framework. Review of Radical Political Economics, Vol. 49, Issue. 3, p. 477.

    Zhang, Guofeng 2016. Environmental and Social-economic Impacts of Sewage Sludge Treatment. p. 1.

    Hiedanpää, Juha and Bromley, Daniel W. 2016. Environmental Heresies. p. 93.

    Adigüzel, Yekbun 2016. Historical and Critical Review on Biophysical Economics. Biophysical Reviews and Letters, Vol. 11, Issue. 02, p. 63.

    Stern, David I. 2015. The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics. p. 1.

    Yan, Jingjing Sha, Jinghua Chu, Xiao Xu, Feng and Higano, Yoshiro 2014. Endogenous derivation of optimal environmental policies for proper treatment of stockbreeding wastes in the upstream region of the Miyun Reservoir, Beijing. Papers in Regional Science, Vol. 93, Issue. 2, p. 477.

    Antoci, Angelo Borghesi, Simone and Galeotti, Marcello 2013. Environmental options and technological innovation: an evolutionary game model. Journal of Evolutionary Economics, Vol. 23, Issue. 2, p. 247.

    Stern, David I. 2011. The role of energy in economic growth. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 1219, Issue. 1, p. 26.

    SPASH, CLIVE L. 2011. Social Ecological Economics: Understanding the Past to See the Future. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Vol. 70, Issue. 2, p. 340.

    Shaw, Daigee Pang, Arwin Lin, Chang-Ching and Hung, Ming-Feng 2010. Economic growth and air quality in China. Environmental Economics and Policy Studies, Vol. 12, Issue. 3, p. 79.

    Montero, José-María Fernández-Avilés, Gema and García, María-Carmen 2010. Estimation of Asymmetric Stochastic Volatility Models: Application to Daily Average Prices of Energy Products. International Statistical Review, Vol. 78, Issue. 3, p. 330.

    Lominac, Christopher D. and Batabyal, Amitrajeet A. 2009. An approach to the management of orchards that are vulnerable to attack by invasive species. Letters in Spatial and Resource Sciences, Vol. 2, Issue. 2-3, p. 123.

    Tschirhart, John 2009. Integrated Ecological-Economic Models. Annual Review of Resource Economics, Vol. 1, Issue. 1, p. 381.

    Bellamy Foster, John and Burkett, Paul 2008. Classical Marxism and the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Organization & Environment, Vol. 21, Issue. 1, p. 3.

    Batabyal, Amitrajeet A. and Nijkamp, Peter 2008. Optimal resource management in the presence of a deleterious alien species: a stochastic model for an orchard. Letters in Spatial and Resource Sciences, Vol. 1, Issue. 2-3, p. 107.

    Keong, Choy Yee 2005. Dam-Induced Development and Environmental and Social Sustainability: The Bakun Industrialization Strategy Revisited. Journal of Economic Issues, Vol. 39, Issue. 1, p. 123.

    Keong, Choy Yee 2005. Sustainable Development—An Institutional Enclave (with Special Reference to the Bakun Dam–Induced Development Strategy in Malaysia). Journal of Economic Issues, Vol. 39, Issue. 4, p. 951.

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    Economy and Environment
    • Online ISBN: 9780511664465
    • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511664465
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Book description

Environmental external effects are evidence of the inability of market prices to reflect the interdependence of economic activities undertaken within a common environment. They are an essential - not a peripheral - feature of all market economics. This essay shows how external effects are produced by the interaction of the economy with its environment, using a classical mass-balance model. No matter how efficient the market may seem to be, the use of market prices to determine depletion and pollution decisions creates more problems than it solves. Far from sharing the stable or relatively stable equilibrium properties of most economic models, the market economy is shown to be forced by its environment through a seemingly chaotic sequence of states. Reliance on the market to accommodate each change of direction merely exaggerates the general instability of the system. The 'market solution' to environmental problems is shown to generate only increasing uncertainty, a progressive myopia, and a heightened risk of conflict.

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