Experiment on common property management

Abstract

Common property resources are (renewable) natural resources where current excessive extraction reduces future resource availability, and the use of which is de facto restricted to a specific set of agents, such as inhabitants of a village or members of a community; think of community-owned forests, coastal fisheries, or water reserves used for irrigation purposes. Standard economic theory predicts that the shared use of a renewable natural resource results in the resource being overexploited. In the real world, some commonly owned resources are indeed severely degraded, but others are not. Identifying why community resource management is successful in some instances but not in others is difficult because of the many confounding mechanisms that are present in the real world. Therefore, economists use economic experiments to pretest the effectiveness of various institutions in sustaining cooperation in resource use such as punishments, rewards, and communication.

Publication
Encyclopedia of Energy, Natural Resource and Environmental Economics
Andries Richter
Andries Richter
Associate Professor

My research focuses on the economics of social–ecological systems, using theoretical models, causal empirical methods, and economic experiments to understand how institutions and human behavior affect the sustainable management of natural resources.