MegaCatálogo Bibliográfico
Centro de Documentación. FCEyS. UNMdP

- Recursos bibliográficos en papel y digitales -
- libros, artículos de revistas, ponencias de eventos, etc. -

» Resultado: 2 registros

Registro 1 de 2
Autor: Antoci, Angelo - Gori, Luca - Sodini, Mauro - Ticci, Elisa - 
Título: Maladaptation and global indeterminacy
Fuente: Environment and Development Economics. v.24, n.6. Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics; Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Páginas: pp. 643-659
Año: dec. 2019
Resumen: This article analyzes a general equilibrium growth model with overlapping generations and (production-induced) environmental degradation. Individuals react to environmental damages through mitigation or adaptation. In the former case, they reduce production and its environmental impact. In the latter, they do not tackle the causes of the problem but rather its consequences (i.e., the wellbeing loss due to environmental degradation) by increasing defensive expenditures. Despite its simplicity, the model can generate different long-term outcomes: convergence to a stationary state following a unique trajectory or local/global indeterminacy. In the last scenario, initial conditions (history) and individual expectations matter and the model can generate coordination failures and endogenous fluctuations. Results cast doubt on solutions to environmental problems relying on the role of individual behavior change or adaptation.
Palabras clave: IMPACTO AMBIENTAL | DANO AMBIENTAL |
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA E + datos de Fuente
Registro 2 de 2
Autor: Ticci, Elisa - Escobal, Javier
Título: Extractive industries and local development in the Peruvian Highlands
Fuente: Environment and Development Economics. v.20, n.1. Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics; Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Páginas: pp. 101-126
Año: Feb. 2015
Resumen: During the last 20 years, the mining sector in Peru has been experiencing sustained growth. Using census, administrative, nationally and regionally representative data we compare districts in the Peruvian Highlands with a recent mining development with suitable counterfactuals. We find that the new mining activities attract migration inflows, and have some positive effects over educational indicators, and that these impacts, on average, are smaller in districts with lower levels of corporate social expenditure. However, the results of this study suggest that the local potential welfare impact of the mining boom is largely untapped and corporate social responsibility has had a limited role in improving this effect.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA E + datos de Fuente

*** No hay más registros para visualizar ***

>> Nueva búsqueda <<

Inicio