Accounting for wealth and income is important. Individuals as well as nations wish to measure their capital stock and in particular their sustainable income which they may consume without living beyond their means and drawing down their assets. There are various kinds of capital: man-made, natural/environmental, and various forms of social capital. Most national accounting in the past has focused on the man-made capital. To be able to properly maintain it, one needs to be aware of and compute a capital consumption (or depreciation) allowance. This allowance is subtracted from a nation's gross domestic product (GDP) to arrive at a nation's net domestic product (NDP). If one only considers man-made capital, the NDP so computed is sustainable in the sense that one can consume that amount while maintaining the capital stock intact, which forms the basis for future production and income. The author deals with the question of how to better account for natural capital in an integrated way within the usual economic accounting framework. He describes the progress that has been made in recent years in conceptualizing and operationalizing the proposed approaches and measures. The author has made an important contribution to this topic in collaboration with the United Nations Statistical Agency (UNSTAT). The publication's goal is to be able to measure environmentally sustainable income.
Details
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Author
Lutz, Ernst [editor]
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Document Date
1993/05/31
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Document Type
Publication
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Report Number
11989
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Volume No
1
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Total Volume(s)
1
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Disclosure Date
2010/07/01
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Doc Name
Toward improved accounting for the environment
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Keywords
system of national accounts;net domestic product;early stage of development;Internal rate of return;United Nations Environment Programme;natural capital;environmental accounting;gross domestic product;natural asset;classification of assets;gains and losses;national income;rates of return;net present value;national wealth;national income account;natural resource base;stock of capital;natural resource accounts;national accounting;operations and maintenance;Natural Resources;net national product;environmental quality indicator;natural gas reserves;quality and relevance;sustainability of development;natural resource depletion;pattern of development;effect on health;environmental impact analysis;contribution to production;market price information;concept of income;natural growth;environmental expenditure;accounting framework;environmental concern;net capital;environmental asset;copyright notice;soil erosion;capital stock;monetary term;cultivated plant;sustainable income;capital accumulation;resource accounting;financial asset;production activity;satellite system;land use;environmental resource;environmental problem;Environmental Resources;environmental issue;neoclassical economics;Fixed Assets;government system;mineral reserve;institutional capital;exchange information;productive asset;asset development;data requirement;financial account;pilot studies;social capital;environmental use;agricultural economics;small country;international standard;discount value;historical monuments;asset account;continuous process;industrial country;public policy;water resource;resource economist;biological resource;empirical work;resource economics;management science;rough indication;research proposal;asset transfer;forestry economics;productive activity;asset valuation;empirical study;mineral consumption;broad consensus;account expert;depletable resources;dutch fund;collaborative effort;aggregate measure;economics literature;empirical result;national measures;ongoing work;international guidelines;positive impact;ecological process;empirical issue;operational term;noncommercial purposes;classroom use;environmental service;social framework;capital consumption;research present;industrialized country;Industrialized countries;international agency;chesapeake bay;asset classification;maximum amount;market area;sales of publications;degradation effect;capital account;monetary accounts;local expert;account identity;accounting principle;data limitation;accounting approach;comprehensive accounting;income flow;budget constraint;export revenue;groundwater asset;oil reserve;net result;water pollution;cleanup cost;raw material;Economic Policy;renewable resource;sectoral analysis;environmental variable;ecosystem service;world economy;recreational land;macroeconomic level;surface water;management tool;market activity;nonmarket good;negative entry;household expenditure;human capital;conceptual issue;
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Citation
Lutz, Ernst [editor];
Toward improved accounting for the environment (English). Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/364841468739232622/Toward-improved-accounting-for-the-environment