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Resourceship: An Austrian theory of mineral resources
Authors:Robert L. Bradley  Suffix"  >Jr.
Affiliation:(1) Institute for Energy Research, Houston, TX, USA
Abstract:Economists inside and outside of the Austrian-school tradition have formulated a subjectivist theory of mineral resources. While von Mises (1940) presented a rudimentary theory, institutionalist Zimmermann (1933 and after) provided an in-depth mind-centered approach distinct from the objective, neoclassical theory for minerals developed by Jevons (1865, 1866), Gray (1913), and Hotelling (1931). A full-fledged Austrian theory identifies the fixity/depletionism view of minerals as incompatible with entrepreneurship. Mineral resourceship, praxeologically akin to manufacturing, or the making of capital goods, demotes the distinction between depletable and nondepletable resources for the sciences of human action. Instead of nonreproducibility, the interplay of geography and institutions becomes the locus of mineral-resource theory, given the nonuniform distribution of deposits. An Austrian-institutional theory is more robust for explaining changes in mineral-resource scarcity than neoclassical depletionism, and offers a wide research agenda for current debates over resource production, usage, and future availability.
Contact Information Robert L. Bradley Jr.Email:
Keywords:Austrian economics  Conservation theory  Harold Hotelling  Institutional economics  Mineral resources  Natural resources  Erich Zimmermann
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