Wealth, Natural Capital, and Sustainable Development: Contrasting Examples from Botswana and Namibia

Theoretical work has demonstrated that sustainable development requires non-declining per capita wealth, where wealth is defined to include produced, natural, human and social capital. Several studies have attempted to measure total national wealth or changes in wealth, but have been seriously hampered by a lack of data, especially for natural and human capital. To address this problem, the UN and other international statistical agencies developed a standardized framework for environmental accounts, the System of integrated Environmental and Economic Accounts (SEEA). Using the newly available asset accounts for natural capital, national wealth accounts are constructed and used to assess the contrasting development paths of Botswana and Namibia. Botswana, with an explicit policy of reinvestment of resource rents, has roughly tripled per capita wealth and national income over the past two decades. Namibia, with no explicit policy to use natural capita to build wealth, has seen per capita wealth and income decline.

[1]  Robert M. Solow,et al.  On the Intergenerational Allocation of Natural Resources , 1986 .

[2]  G. Heal,et al.  National Income and the Environment , 2001 .

[3]  Partha Dasgupta,et al.  Evaluating Projects and Assessing Sustainable Development in Imperfect Economies , 2003 .

[4]  J. McGuinness,et al.  A Night at the Opera , 1972 .

[5]  G. Lange,et al.  Cattle numbers, biomass, productivity and land degradation in the commercial farming sector of Namibia, 1915‐95 , 1998 .

[6]  P. Ferreira,et al.  The Long-Run Economic Impact of Aids , 2003 .

[7]  Clive Bell,et al.  The Long-Run Economic Costs of Aids: Theory and an Application to South Africa , 2003 .

[8]  Richard M. Auty,et al.  Sustaining Development in Mineral Economies: The Resource Curse Thesis , 1993 .

[9]  Michael A. Clemens,et al.  Genuine Savings Rates in Developing Countries , 1999 .

[10]  Financial supervision,et al.  Annual Report 1994 , 1994 .

[11]  Thorvaldur Gylfason Exports, Inflation, and Growth , 1997, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[12]  J. Barnes Economic returns and allocation of resources in the wildlife sector of Botswana , 2001 .

[13]  P. Dasgupta,et al.  Wealth as a Criterion for Sustainable Development , 2001 .

[14]  John M. Hartwick,et al.  Intergenerational equity and the investing of rents from exhaustible resources , 2017 .

[15]  C. Stahmer,et al.  Integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting , 1997 .

[16]  R. Tejaswi,et al.  Namibia: Selected Development impact of HIV/AIDS , 2001 .

[17]  K. Mäler,et al.  National accounts and environmental resources , 1991, Environmental and Resource Economics.

[18]  Arvind Subramanian,et al.  Addressing the Natural Resource Curse: An Illustration from Nigeria , 2003, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[19]  A. Kunte Estimating national wealth : methodology and results , 1998 .

[20]  R. Solow,et al.  Intergenerational Equity and Exhaustable Resources , 1973 .

[21]  P. Dasgupta,et al.  Human Well-Being and the Natural Environment , 2002 .

[22]  M. Haacker The Economic Consequences of Hiv/Aids in Southern Africa , 2002 .

[23]  John C. V. Pezzey,et al.  Sustainable Development Concepts: An Economic Analysis , 1992 .

[24]  Richard M. Auty,et al.  Sustainable Development in Mineral Economies , 1999 .

[25]  Mehran,et al.  Botswana : selected issues and statistical appendix , 1998 .

[26]  G. Lange,et al.  Sustainable development in mineral economies: the example of Botswana , 2004, Environment and Development Economics.

[27]  John C. V. Pezzey,et al.  Sustainable Development Concept: An Economic Analysis , 1992 .

[28]  D. Pearce,et al.  Capital theory and the measurement of sustainable development: an indicator of “weak” sustainability , 1993 .

[29]  P. Dasgupta,et al.  Net national product, wealth, and social well-being , 2000, Environment and Development Economics.

[30]  Jeffrey D. Sachs,et al.  The curse of natural resources , 2001 .