ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1989. Professor Robinson begins by examining natural resource classification and the nature of return in mining, giving particular emphasis to different sources of long-run price changes in mining and their relevance for user cost and the economic treatment for exhaustible resources. He then traces the development of the economic theory of exhaustible resources from the last quarter of the eighteenth century to the first quarter of the twentieth, documenting the differing views of various authors about the future availability of mineral resources and the extent of user cost involved in their exploitation. He identifies a link between the perceived availability of exhaustible resources and the nature of the economic theory used to explain their exploitation. This book should be of interest to students and researchers of Economic Theory and Policy.

part I|52 pages

Some Conceptual and Theoretical Issues

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|18 pages

The Classification of Natural Resources

chapter 3|21 pages

The Nature of Return in Mining

part II|128 pages

The Economics of Exhaustible Resources

chapter 4|12 pages

Adam Smith

chapter 5|10 pages

David Ricardo

chapter 6|6 pages

Smith and Ricardo Compared

chapter 7|12 pages

Henry Carey

chapter 8|9 pages

J.S. Mill

chapter 9|9 pages

Karl Marx

chapter 10|13 pages

W.R. Sorley

chapter 11|12 pages

Alfred Marshall

chapter 12|20 pages

L.C. Gray

chapter 13|14 pages

Gustav Cassel

chapter 14|8 pages

Conclusion