Non-Renewable Resources and Sustainable Resource Extraction: An Empirical Test of the Hotelling Rule’s Significance to Gold Extraction in South Africa
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Theoretical Literature
2.1.1. Hotelling’s Rule
2.1.2. Hartwick Rule
2.1.3. Marxism
2.1.4. Non-Declining Natural Capital Stock Approach
2.2. Empirical Literature
3. Methodology
3.1. Data Sources
3.2. Estimation Techniques
- (i)
- First, there are descriptive studies which examine the price behaviour.
- (ii)
- Second, a specific model can be tested by estimating equations. This approach relies on econometric estimations.
- (iii)
- The third approach refers to a reformulation of Hotelling’s Rule in the form of the HVP.
3.2.1. Descriptive Statistics
- Firms will always try to extract low-cost resources before high-cost resources, causing resource extraction costs to increase over time.
- In general, greater scarcity caused by in situ reserves increases the value of a resource, causing the price to increase over time.
- Since the price of a resource increases over time, then demand and production should decrease over time.
3.2.2. Inferential Statistics: Econometric Estimation of Equations
- (i)
- The autoregressive distributed lags method allows us to express the cointegrated behaviour of variables which have a different order of integration.
- (ii)
- The ARDL procedure is irrespective of whether variables used in a model are I(0), I(1), or mutually cointegrated [48].
4. Presentation of Results
4.1. Descriptive Statistics
4.1.1. Gold Price Trends
4.1.2. Gold Production
- (i)
- In general, greater scarcity caused by in situ reserves increases the value of a resource, causing the price to increase over time.
- (i)
- Since the price of a resource increases over time, then demand and production should decrease over time [59].
4.1.3. Gold Consumption
4.2. Inferential Statistics
4.2.1. Unit Root Tests
4.2.2. Cointegration Test: ARDL Bound Test
4.2.3. ARDL Results
4.2.4. Diagnostic Checks
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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T Statistic | Value | K |
---|---|---|
F Statistic | 4.8523 | 2 |
Critical value bounds | ||
Significance | I(0) Bound | I(1) Bound |
10% | 2.1 | 3.13 |
5% | 2.43 | 3.54 |
2.5% | 2.74 | 3.61 |
1% | 3.12 | 4.54 |
Variable | Coefficient | Standard Error | t-Statistic | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
GP | 0.217066 | 0.028445 | 7.631162 | 0.0000 |
INT | 0.303575 | 0.466545 | 0.650688 | 0.5168 |
LM3 | −0.048382 | 0.008921 | −5.423479 | 0.0000 |
LPG | 0.108165 | 0.017013 | 6.357574 | 0.0000 |
LGDP | 0.162778 | 0.078210 | 2.081287 | 0.0401 |
Variable | Coefficient | Standard Error | t-Statistic | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
ECM | −0.037720 | 0.01951 | −1.93306 | 0.0593 |
D(INT) | −0.022048 | 0.00713 | −0.00402 | 0.6871 |
D(LM3) | 0.000338 | 0.00010 | 3.38427 | 0.0001 |
D(LPG) | −0.000187 | 9.88105 | −1.89788 | 0.0824 |
D(LGDP) | −0.000287 | 0.00012 | −2.29532 | 0.0321 |
Heteroskedasticity Test | ||
---|---|---|
Chi-Sq | Df | Prob |
183.2053 | 180 | 0.4196 |
Breusch-Godfrey Serial Correlation LM Test | |||
---|---|---|---|
F Statistic | 0.008002 | Prob.F | 0.9303 |
Obs * R Squared | 0.025443 | Prob.Chi-Squared | 0.8733 |
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Mlambo, C. Non-Renewable Resources and Sustainable Resource Extraction: An Empirical Test of the Hotelling Rule’s Significance to Gold Extraction in South Africa. Sustainability 2022, 14, 10619. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710619
Mlambo C. Non-Renewable Resources and Sustainable Resource Extraction: An Empirical Test of the Hotelling Rule’s Significance to Gold Extraction in South Africa. Sustainability. 2022; 14(17):10619. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710619
Chicago/Turabian StyleMlambo, Courage. 2022. "Non-Renewable Resources and Sustainable Resource Extraction: An Empirical Test of the Hotelling Rule’s Significance to Gold Extraction in South Africa" Sustainability 14, no. 17: 10619. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710619
APA StyleMlambo, C. (2022). Non-Renewable Resources and Sustainable Resource Extraction: An Empirical Test of the Hotelling Rule’s Significance to Gold Extraction in South Africa. Sustainability, 14(17), 10619. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710619