Minutes BAH Xii Environmental Economics Sem VI 1
Minutes BAH Xii Environmental Economics Sem VI 1
Minutes BAH Xii Environmental Economics Sem VI 1
Minutes of Meeting
Attended by:
Readings:
Charles Kolstad. Intermediate Environmental Economics, Oxford University Press, 2nd
edition (2012). [Indian reprint available.]
Roger Perman, Yue Ma, James McGilvray and Michael Common. Natural Resource and
Environmental Economics, Pearson Education/Addison Wesley, 4th edition (2011).
Robert N. Stavins (ed.). Economics of the Environment: Selected Readings, W.W. Norton,
6th edition (2012).
Page 1 of 4
TOPIC WISE READINGS
- All chapters below refer to Kolstad (2012). Entire chapter has to be covered except where
sections to be skipped are specifically mentioned.
- The number of lectures suggested against each topic has been revised
- Please note some readings are new and some have been dropped.
- In addition to the prescribed readings, it was suggested to share the links that update the
students with the ongoing present issues related to Climate change, Emission Trading
System (ETS), debates related to COP 26 Summit Glasgow, etc. These present challenges
and issues could be presented as case studies by students for internal assessment.
Don Fullerton and Robert Stavins (1998). “How Economists See the Environment.” Nature,
Vol. 395, Oct 1, 1998, pp. 433-434.
[Reprinted as Chapter 1 in Stavins (2012).]
Supplementary Reading:
Perman et al. (2011). Chapters 3 and 4.
Three Year Action Agenda (NITI Aayog, April 2017): Chapter 23 (Environment and Forests)
State of Environment Report: India 2009 (Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government
of India, 2009): Chapter 2 (State and Trends of the Environment): Land. Air, Water,
Biodiversity (p. 9 to 71).
2. The Theory of Externalities (approx. 7 lectures): Pareto optimality and market failure in
the presence of externalities; property rights and the Coase theorem.
Schmalensee, Richard and Robert N. Stavins (2017). “The design of environmental markets:
What have we learned from experience with cap and trade?” Oxford Review of Economic
Policy, Vol. 33, No. 4, pp. 572-588.
Blackman, Allen, Li, Z., and Liu, A. A. (2018). “Efficacy of command-and-control and
market-based environmental regulation in developing countries,” Annual Review of Resource
Economics, Vol. 10, pp. 381-404.
Supplementary Readings:
1. Perman et al. (2011). Chapter 6.
2. Michael Sandel (and replies to Sandel) “It’s Immoral to Buy the Rights to Pollute”
[Reprinted as Chapter 18 in Stavins (2012).]
Jonathan Harris and Brian Roach (2018). Environmental and Natural Resource Economics: A
Contemporary Approach, Routledge. Chapters 12, 13.
Supplementary Readings:
1. Nordhaus, William D. (2013). Climate Casino: Risk, Uncertainty, and Economics for a
Warming World, Yale University Press.
2. Richard Newell, William Pizer and Daniel Raimi (2013). “Carbon markets 15 years
after Kyoto: Lessons learned, new challenges,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol.
27, No. 1, pp. 123-46.
Page 3 of 4
6. Sustainable Development (3 lecture): Concepts; measurement.
Supplementary Readings:
1. Robert Solow (1992). “An Almost Practical Step towards Sustainability,” Resources for
the Future (RFF) 40th anniversary lecture.
2. Robert Solow (1992). “Sustainability: An Economist’s Perspective”
[Re-printed as Chapter 28 in Economics of the Environment: Selected Readings (2012).]
3. Perman et al. (2011): Chapters 2 and 19.
4. Economic Survey 2018-19 Volume 2, Chapter 5 Sustainable Development and Climate
Change.
Assessment:
1. Internal evaluation will comprise one class tests (10 marks) and (5 marks) for
attendance. Remaining (10 marks) evaluation may be done by case study submitted and
presented by students in class in form of real examples as case study applications of the
theory taught in the course, as suggested by the members present in the meeting.
2. The end-semester exam (75 marks) will comprise numerical and other questions.
Page 4 of 4