Resources accounting in China
01.03.1999
Alessandro Lanza
Kluwer Academic, Series on Economics, Energy, Environment
This volume, which brings together papers from a seminar held in Beijing
in 1996, contains contributions written by Chinese participants as well
as by visiting experts from the West. The different experience of the
several authors is represented in the unique balance of the book: all
the Chinese contributions point out the importance of the environment in
economic development, expressing a determination to measure effects as a
means to the successful management of natural resources. They
concentrate on rather specific issues within the constraints of the
prevailing economic situation, where identification and asset pricing
tend to be specified by administrative norms. Several of these papers
contain interesting and useful statistical information. The papers by
the visiting experts also stress the importance of taking account of
environmental aspects in deriving indicators relating to economic
development. All the papers, however, reveal that work in this area is
still evolving very quickly, sometimes in unexpected directions. This
particular juxtaposition of approaches is a valuable record of the
situation at a particular point in time when concern about the
environment in China is developing rapidly.
Contributors: M. Anxin, D. Donghai, Z. Hongchun, Z.
Guirong, R.J. Kopp, Q. Kuo , Y. Ling, K-G. Mäler, A. Markandya, I.
Milborrow, H.M. Peskin, W. Qi, L. Rongzi, Z. Wang, X. Weixuan,
H.Yuanzhao, L. Yulin, W. Zheng, W. Zhixiong
This volume, which brings together papers from a seminar held in Beijing in 1996, contains contributions written by Chinese participants as well as by visiting experts from the West. The different experience of the several authors is represented in the unique balance of the book: all the Chinese contributions point out the importance of the environment in economic development, expressing a determination to measure effects as a means to the successful management of natural resources. They concentrate on rather specific issues within the constraints of the prevailing economic situation, where identification and asset pricing tend to be specified by administrative norms. Several of these papers contain interesting and useful statistical information. The papers by the visiting experts also stress the importance of taking account of environmental aspects in deriving indicators relating to economic development. All the papers, however, reveal that work in this area is still evolving very quickly, sometimes in unexpected directions. This particular juxtaposition of approaches is a valuable record of the situation at a particular point in time when concern about the environment in China is developing rapidly. Â
Contributors: M. Anxin, D. Donghai, Z. Hongchun, Z. Guirong, R.J. Kopp, Q. Kuo , Y. Ling, K-G. Mäler, A. Markandya, I. Milborrow, H.M. Peskin, W. Qi, L. Rongzi, Z. Wang, X. Weixuan, H.Yuanzhao, L. Yulin, W. Zheng, W. Zhixiong