Economic Growth Theory and Natural Resource Constraints: A Stocktake and Critical Assessment

Abstract

Society is facing significant environmental challenges. The effects of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental degradation are being increasingly felt worldwide. In recent years, researchers have attempted to adapt neoclassical and endogenous growth theory to account for constraints imposed by scarce natural resources. In this article, we review where, and how, researchers tend to incorporate natural resources and natural capital into growth theory. We then outline areas and questions that remain unanswered, including how novel impact investing and the eroding trade-off between GDP and the environment affect growth theory.

Publication
Australian Economic Review
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Robbie Maris
Robbie Maris
Education Economics PhD Student and Research Assistant

Robbie is a PhD student in education economics at UCL. His current research focuses on evaluating the effects of T levels (a new high school qualification) on student achievement and social mobility, with a particular focus on students from disadvantaged backgrounds.

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