Latest Blogs
-
Kim and Todd Saxton: Go for the gold! But maybe not every time.
-
Q&A: What you need to know about the CDC’s new mask guidance
-
Carmel distiller turns hand sanitizer pivot into a community fundraising platform
-
Lebanon considering creating $13.7M in trails, green space for business park
-
Local senior-living complex more than doubles assisted-living units in $5M expansion
How rich that Elinor Ostrom, the Indiana University professor who won a Nobel prize for economics yesterday, got her nails
dirty researching how people in pockets of forests in undeveloped nations allocate their natural resources.
Indiana
of course has some of the world’s best hardwood forests. So, how would her theory work here?
Ostrom’s
research focuses not on traditional free-market economics or the other extreme of centralized planning, but on how people
manage resources when they share the resources in common and make their own rules at the local level.
The rap on
common resources—“the tragedy of commons”—is that resources become overused. However, Ostrom found
that people who use common property tend to think in terms of making the resources last. They develop rules and acceptable
behaviors resulting in more sustainable forests, or water or other resources.
Most Indiana forests have been
managed for maximum production of oak, cherry, walnut and other prized species. But environmental groups complain of logging
equipment churning up fragile soil and landowners cutting down the best specimens, thus removing their ability to produce
seeds.
Timber operators and landowners counter that they care for the land as well as possible in order to maximize
their investments, not to mention maintaining a great way of life. Ray Moistner, who leads the Indiana Hardwood
Lumberman’s Association, a trade group of sawyers and others in the industry, says forests in the
state overwhelming are managed for long-term growth.
In fact, Moistner maintains, the loose-knit
network of landowners could be compared to the local groups Ostrom discovered.
“Our lands
are sustainable here when left to themselves and to this common group of owners managing their forest land,”
Moistner says.
What do you think? Which economic system is best for managing natural resources?
Anyone want to try on Ostrom’s work at a practical level here in Indiana?
Please enable JavaScript to view this content.