Nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand

This paper investigates the implications of an intertemporally dependent demand structure in the market for an exhaustible resource. The demand structure is derived endogenously in a partial equilibrium model where price-taking users combine the resource with capital to produce final output. It is s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Khadr, A
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: Oxford Institute for Energy Studies 1987
_version_ 1797103157465055232
author Khadr, A
author_facet Khadr, A
author_sort Khadr, A
collection OXFORD
description This paper investigates the implications of an intertemporally dependent demand structure in the market for an exhaustible resource. The demand structure is derived endogenously in a partial equilibrium model where price-taking users combine the resource with capital to produce final output. It is shown that, when demand for the resource is modelled explicitly as a derived demand, the common assumption of an intertemporally independent sequence of instantaneous demand relationships is justified if there is a perfect rental market for capital equipment and there are no internal adjustment costs associated with either adding to the stock of equipment or subtracting from it. In the more realistic case where changes in capital stocks incur adjustment costs, the time-profile of demand is determined by the underlying programme of (dis)investment. In this case, changes in the resource price over time induce a lagged demand response.<br/><br/> The paper goes on to study the properties of an intertemporal competitive equilibrium, with emphasis on the demand structure with underlying adjustment costs. Agents are assumed to transact on perfectly functioning forward markets, so expectations about the resource price are always fulfilled a post, The principal results to emerge from the analysis are that the resource utilization rate declines to zero in the long term as processes that use the resource in question are replaced by others; however, the precise time-path of substitution depends sensitively on the nature of adjustment costs. For example, if adjustment costs exhibit non-convexities, substitution away from processes that use the resource occurs in "pulses", in contrast to the smooth substitution programme under convex adjustment costs.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:16:06Z
format Working paper
id oxford-uuid:f12069bb-a295-4433-b6a5-e76be157a79a
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:16:06Z
publishDate 1987
publisher Oxford Institute for Energy Studies
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:f12069bb-a295-4433-b6a5-e76be157a79a2022-03-27T11:53:37ZNonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demandWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:f12069bb-a295-4433-b6a5-e76be157a79aEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetOxford Institute for Energy Studies1987Khadr, AThis paper investigates the implications of an intertemporally dependent demand structure in the market for an exhaustible resource. The demand structure is derived endogenously in a partial equilibrium model where price-taking users combine the resource with capital to produce final output. It is shown that, when demand for the resource is modelled explicitly as a derived demand, the common assumption of an intertemporally independent sequence of instantaneous demand relationships is justified if there is a perfect rental market for capital equipment and there are no internal adjustment costs associated with either adding to the stock of equipment or subtracting from it. In the more realistic case where changes in capital stocks incur adjustment costs, the time-profile of demand is determined by the underlying programme of (dis)investment. In this case, changes in the resource price over time induce a lagged demand response.<br/><br/> The paper goes on to study the properties of an intertemporal competitive equilibrium, with emphasis on the demand structure with underlying adjustment costs. Agents are assumed to transact on perfectly functioning forward markets, so expectations about the resource price are always fulfilled a post, The principal results to emerge from the analysis are that the resource utilization rate declines to zero in the long term as processes that use the resource in question are replaced by others; however, the precise time-path of substitution depends sensitively on the nature of adjustment costs. For example, if adjustment costs exhibit non-convexities, substitution away from processes that use the resource occurs in "pulses", in contrast to the smooth substitution programme under convex adjustment costs.
spellingShingle Khadr, A
Nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand
title Nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand
title_full Nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand
title_fullStr Nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand
title_full_unstemmed Nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand
title_short Nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand
title_sort nonrenewable resource allocation under intertemporally dependent demand
work_keys_str_mv AT khadra nonrenewableresourceallocationunderintertemporallydependentdemand