Property Rights
Property Rights
A bundle of entitlements defining the owners rights, privileges, and limitations for use of resources
Public Goods
A good whose consumption is indivisible -one persons consumption of a good does not diminish the amount available to others Example: warning systems, landscapes, genetic diversity *are NOT goods supplied by the public
Exclusivity
All benefits and cost accrued as a result of owning and using the resource accrue to the owner and only the owner
Universality
All resources are privately owned and all entitlements are completely specified
Transferability
All rights can be transerred in voluntary trades
Conservation Easements
An agreement between landowner and the "holder" of the conservation easement under which the landowner voluntarily restricts certain uses of the property to protect natural, productive, or cultural features
Consumer Surplus
Difference between WTP as given by the demand curve and amount actually paid as given by the price
Producer Surplus
Economic rents above the firms cost of production
Positive Externalities
Gardens, Landscapes
Coase Theorem
One of the most used ideas of economics by professions outside of economics, used by judicial branch, Economic inventive based approach, Does not matter who gets the rights we will reach society's efficient point
Conservation Reserve Program
Pays farmers to retire land from production Yearly compensation
Transferable rights
Permits set equal to the level of pollution desired
Negative externalities
Pollution, water, air, noise etc
Private Market
Private firms- best interest to protect ecosystem services
Real source of wealth
Production and exchange
Enforceability
Property rights should be secure from involuntary seizure from others
Endangered Species Act
Provision that limit the action of both government and private landowners whose property provides critical habitat for listed species
Property rights the government reserves
Right to tax, right to police, right of eminent domain, right to take estate if no heirs and will
Market equilibrium
Supply=Demand
Ecosystem Goods/ Services
The benefits people obtain from ecosystems Necessary to support and maintain life and support economic activities Many of these services lack adequate substitutes Classification: Provisioning, Regulating, Cultural, Supporting services
Transaction
Two bundles of property rights are exchanged
Purchase of Development Rights
Type of easement owner sells the rights to develop the land
Property rights characteristics
Universality, Exclusivity, Transferability, Enforceability
Types of actions
Voluntary actions, Government persuasion, command and control, private markets, and market type incentives