Bibliographic Information

Multiple-use management : the economics of public forestlands

by Michael D. Bowes and John V. Krutilla

Resources for the Future, c1989

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Note

"This study was undertaken as part of Resources for the Future's Forest Economics and Policy Program"

Includes bibliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this book, Bowes and Krutilla bring together what is known and relevant about valuing the nonmarket services of the public forests and propose a new theoretical framework that allows multiple uses, the biological dynamics of the forest, and the institutional and economic realities of public forest management to be taken into account in forest planning and budgeting. The authors begin by tracing the development of multiple use in forest management and by exploring the multiple uses of the public forests and the economics of multiple-use forestry. They offer a masterful analysis of the nineteenth-century model of the single timber stand on which much forestry practice has been premised. Bowes and Krutilla then take a giant step forward by developing a larger theoretical framework and showing how forest structure and dynamics can be included in the economic model. The authors' rigorous exposition theory provides the foundation for analyzing case studies of management for timber and water yields in the Rockies, of recreation valuation in the Black Hills and White Mountain national forests, and of joint production in the White Clouds Peaks --- analyses that demonstrate the authors' great skill in developing practical methodologies to meet actual forest management problems.

Table of Contents

Part 1: The Historical, Institutional, and Theoretical Background 1. Development of the Concept of Multiple-Use Forestland Management 2. The Multiple Uses of Public Lands 3. The Economics of Multiple-Use Forestry 4. Dynamic Models of Multiple-Use Management Part 2: Applications of Multiple-Use Management in Forestry Settings 5. Forest Management for Increased Timber and Water Yields 6. Valuing Recreational Quality: Hedonic Pricing 7. Recreation Valuation for Forest Planning 8. The Flip Side of Joint Production 9. Funding Nonpriced Resource Services 10. Below-Cost Timber Sales and Forest Planning 11. Conclusions: An Interpretive Synthesis

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