Factor Demand and Substitution in Mineral-Intensive Industries

This paper presents a model of the demand for reproducible capital, labor, and nonfuel mineral resources in six manufacturing industries that process exhaustible mineral resources. Partial substitution elasticities are estimated from translog unit cost functions and factor demand equations. These estimates are then used to simulate input demands in a setting of exhaustible resources scarcity. The principal finding is that substitution possibilities are much more limited than those implied by Cobb-Douglas production technology, and this has important implications for the possible conservation of exhaustible resources.

[1]  Walter Diewert,et al.  Exact and superlative index numbers , 1976 .

[2]  R. Kopp,et al.  Measuring factor substitution with neoclassical models: an experimental evaluation , 1980 .

[3]  J. R. Moroney,et al.  The Structure of Production in American Manufacturing , 1972 .

[4]  R. Solow,et al.  Extraction Costs in the Theory of Exhaustible Resources , 1976 .

[5]  John Wills,et al.  Technical change in the U.S. primary metals industry , 1979 .

[6]  Ernst R. Berndt,et al.  Parametric Productivity Measurement and Choice Among Flexible Functional Forms , 1979, Journal of Political Economy.

[7]  B. Gold Tracing Gaps between Expectations and Results of Technological Innovations: The Case of Iron and Steel , 1976 .

[8]  Gerhard Tintner,et al.  Mathematical Analysis for Economists. , 1938 .

[9]  E. Berndt,et al.  Technology, Prices, and the Derived Demand for Energy , 1975 .

[10]  J. Moroney,et al.  Factor Costs and Factor Use: An Analysis of Labor, Capital, and Natural Resource Inputs , 1977 .

[11]  Dale W. Jorgenson,et al.  U.S. Energy Policy and Economic Growth, 1975-2000 , 1974 .

[12]  J. M. Griffin,et al.  An Intercountry Translog Model of Energy Substitution Responses , 1976 .

[13]  Harold J. Barnett,et al.  Scarcity and growth. , 1963 .

[14]  R. F. Gilbert,et al.  Small Sample Properties of Alternative Estimators of Seemingly Unrelated Regressions , 1968 .

[15]  J. Stiglitz A Neoclassical Analysis of the Economics of Natural Resources , 1980 .