Hotelling's rule
Harold Hotelling published a paper The Economics of Exhaustible Resources in the Journal of Political Economy in 1931, this analysis lead to what became known as Hotelling's rule.
Hotelling was an American mathematical statistician and an economic theorist who is also associated with other phrases including Hotelling's law, Hotelling's lemma and Hotelling's T-square distribution in statistics. Hotelling's rule, although established in the 1930s became well know in the 1970s after the oil crisis and high oil prices because it looked at how the economics of finite resources, such as oil from an economic perspective. It is also relevant today in relation to the construction of buildings because there is increasing awareness of the environmental impacts of material use in buildings and the differentiation between renewable and non-renewable resources.
Standard capitalist economics, usually looks at how prices are established on normal goods or services, in the neoclassical sense or a demand and competition context, the aims being to achieve maximum profits for producers with minimimal costs. In this scenario the economic rules generally show that price equals marginal cost in perfect competition. Hotelling introduced into this equation the possibility resources are not infinately available, and many are indeed finite with limited availabilty, such as coal, oil, natural gas (something people became increasingly aware of from the 1970s).
The rule shows that, in the profit-maximization scenario, if a resource is finite, the producer will not just charge a marginal cost, he will need to also charge a premium which he called the scarcity rent. This scarcity rent premium allows for the fact that once consumed, that one unit of finite resource, is no longer available in the future. So once this is factored into the equation the logical economics would be to sell the product or resource a price that increases at the rate of interest.
Or in other words 'the net price path is a function of time, while maximizing economic rent during the time of fully extracting a non-renewable natural resource. The maximum rent, the scarcity or Hotelling rent is the maximum rent that could be obtained while emptying the stock resource. In efficient exploitation of a non-renewable and non-augmentable resource, the percentage change in net-price per unit of time should equal the discount rate in order to maximise the present value of the resource capital over the extraction period.'
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- A social, circular economy.
- Circular economy models.
- Circular economy - transforming the worlds number one consumer of raw materials.
- Composting.
- Composites.
- Construction materials
- Construction waste.
- Cradle to cradle product registry system.
- Deconstruction.
- Design for deconstruction.
- Economic sustainability.
- End of life potential.
- Green supply chain management.
- Life cycle.
- Planned obsolescence
- Products as a Service PaaS.
- Quantification of construction materials in existing buildings (material intensity).
- Recyclable construction materials.
- Recycling.
- Reduce, reuse, recycle.
- Renewable energy.
- Reused construction products.
- Sustainable materials.
- Sustainability.
- Types of biobased materials.
- Types of materials.
- Use of ceramics in construction.
- Waste management plan.
- Waste management plan for England.
Featured articles and news
Timber in Construction Roadmap
Ambitious plans from the Government to increase the use of timber in construction.
ECA digital series unveils road to net-zero.
Retrofit and Decarbonisation framework N9 launched
Aligned with LHCPG social value strategy and the Gold Standard.
Competence framework for sustainability
In the built environment launched by CIC and the Edge.
Institute of Roofing members welcomed into CIOB
IoR members transition to CIOB membership based on individual expertise and qualifications.
Join the Building Safety Linkedin group to stay up-to-date and join the debate.
Government responds to the final Grenfell Inquiry report
A with a brief summary with reactions to their response.
A brief description and background to this new February law.
Everything you need to know about building conservation and the historic environment.
NFCC publishes Industry White Paper on Remediation
Calling for a coordinated approach and cross-departmental Construction Skills Strategy to manage workforce development.
'who blames whom and for what, and there are three reasons for doing that: legal , cultural and moral"
How the Home Energy Model will be different from SAP
Comparing different building energy models.
Mapping approaches for standardisation.
UK Construction contract spending up at the start of 2025
New construction orders increase by 69 percent on December.
Preparing for the future: how specifiers can lead the way
As the construction industry prepares for the updated home and building efficiency standards.
Embodied Carbon in the Built Environment
A practical guide for built environment professionals.