Lecture Notes & Readings

Date

Topic

Related Readings

January 17, 2006

Introduction and overview

  • Course Outline/Syllabus
  • Skim: Economics of Water Resources: A Survey (pages 11-22 in Reader,Volume I)

January 22,24

 

January 29,31

Industrial Water Demand 1

Industrial Water Demand 2

  • Read: Determinants of Water Use (pages 23-34 in the Reader,VolumeI)
  • Skim: Industrial Demand - Empirical Modeling (pages 59-65 in Reader, Volume I)
  • Skim: Urban Nonresidential Water Use and Conservation (pages 66-75 in Reader, Volume I)

Jan 31

Estimating Industrial Input Demand-Babin (Revised 2/1/07)

  • Read: Estimation of Substitution Possibilities between Water and other Production Inputs (pages 76-79 in Reader, Volume I)

February 5,7

Input-Output Analysis

  • Read: Including the Economic Impact of Cost Paying in Regional Input-Output Analysis (pages 80-83 in Reader, Volume I)

February 12, 14

Residential Water Use(revised 2-25, but not substantively)

Water and Growth (addition 2-12)

  • Read pgs 27-29 (Water and Growth)The Economic Value of Water
  • Read: Determinants of Water Use (pages 34-45 in the Reader,VolumeI)
  • Skim: Municipalities (Gibbons) (pages 84-92 in Reader, Volume I)
  • Read: Municipal Demand for Water in Kuwait: Methodological Issues and Empirical Results (pages 93-98 in Reader, Volume I)

February 19

Block Rate Pricing

  • Read: Short- and Long-Run Effects of Price on Municipal Water Use (pages 99-105 in Reader, Volume I)
  • Skim: The Impact of Price on Residential Water Demand: Some New Insights (pages 106-109 in Reader, Volume I)
  • Skim: A Simultaneous Demand Model for Block Rates (pages 110-113 in Reader, Volume 1)
  • Read: Forecasting Demand and Measuring Price Elasticity (pages 114-122 in Reader, Volume I)
  • Skim: Do Residential Water Demand Side Management Policies Measure Up? (pages 123-141 in Reader, Volume I)

 February 26, 28

Consumer Surplus I

Consumer Surplus II

Contingent Valuation

  • Read: Contingent Valuation and Actual Behavior: Predicting Connections to New Water Systems in the State of Kerala, India (pages 142-153 in Reader, Volume 1)
  • Read: Valuing Water Supply Reliability (pages 214-219, Reader, VolumeI)
  • Skim: The Economic Value of Water (linked here)

March 5

Price and Rate Structures

LA Water Rate Example

  • Read: Price and Rate Structures (pages 181-202 in Reader, Volume I)
  • Read: Designing New Water Rates for Los Angeles (pages 203-213 in Reader, Volume 1)

March 7, 12

Urban Water Supply and Privatization

  • READ: Public vs. Private Water Delivery: A Hedonic Approach (pages 220-225 in Reader, Volume I)
  • Read: Government Opportunism and the Provision of Water (pages 249-266 in Reader, Volume I)

?

Climate Change

April

Agricultural Water Use

  • Read: Crop-Water Production Functions: Economic Implications for Arizona (pages 7-20 in Reader, Volume II)

April

Estimating crop-water production functions (Econometric studies)

  • Read: Crop-Water Production Functions: Economic Implications for Arizona (pages 7-20 in Reader, Volume II)
  • Skim: Alternative Forms for Production Functions of Irrigated Crops (pages 30-46 in Reader, Volume II)

 

April

Linear Programming

  • Read: Linear Programming Models for Estimating the Agricultural Demand Function for Imported Water in the Pecos River Basin (pages 220-227 in Reader, Volume II)
  • Skim: A Revaluation of Price Elasticities for Irrigation Water (pages 76-81 in Reader, Volume II)

April 11

Demand for Irrigation Water

  • Read: Estimating the Demand for Irrigation Water in the Central Valley and California (pages 21-29 in  Reader, Volume II)
  • Read: A Method for Estimating the Demand for Irrigation Water (pages 71-75 in Reader, Volume II)
  • Skim: Western Irrigation Response to Pumping Costs: A Water Demand Analysis Using Climatic Regions (handed out in class)
  • Skim: Water Conservation in Irrigated Agriculture: A Stochastic Production Frontier Model  (pages 63-70 in Reader, Volume II)

April 16

Irrigation Technology (revised 4-16)

  • Read: A Reevaluation of Price Elasticities for Irrigation Water (pages 76-81 in volume II)
  • Read: Economic Implications of Drip Irrigation (pages 82-83 in Reader, Volume II)
  • Read: The Choices of Irrigation Technologies in California (pages 84-94, Reader, Volume II)

 

April 18

Large Water Projects (revised 4-16)

 

April 23

Pricing irrigation Water

  • Read: Pricing Subsidies and Economic Efficiency: The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (pages 47-62 in volume II)
  • Skim: Water Pricing and Rent Seeking in California Agriculture (pages 119-134 in Reader, Volume II)

April 25

Distributional Effects of Subsidies

  • Read: Distributional Welfare Implications of an Irrigation Water Subsidy (pages 103-111 in Reader, Volume II)
  • Skim: The Welfare Economics of Price Supports in U.S. Agriculture (pages 112-118 in Reader, Volume II)

April 30

Groundwater (revised 4-23)

Groundwater Link 1

Groundwater Link 2

Groundwater Link 3

 

  • Read: California’s Groundwater Resource (pages 184-185 in Reader, Volume II)
  • Skim: An Overview of the Law of Groundwater Management (pages 186-201 in volume II)
  • Read: The Case for Regional Groundwater Management (pages 202-205 in volume II)
  • Read: Groundwater: Focusing on the Real Issue (pages 206-219 in volume II)
  • Read: Barriers to Effective Ground-Water Management: The California Case (pages 228-233 in Reader, Volume II)

May 2,7

   Surface Water (revised 4-30)

   Water Markets

   Water Markets revised?

 

  • Read: Innovative Approaches to Water Allocation: The Potential for Water Markets (pages 161-167 in volume II)
  • Read: Managing Water Scarcity: An Evaluation of Interregional Transfers (pages 168-174 in volume II)
  • Read: Why Are There So Few Transactions Among Water Users (pages 175-183 in volume II)