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The Second Edition of Economics of Water Resources: From Regulation
to Privatization updates and expands the exposition of the authors'
central theses concerning: the integration of water
quantity-quality issues, and the treatment of water as a
multi-product commodity, with the market playing the major role in
the determination of water quality-discrimination pricing; the
drawbacks of public control, regulation and enforcement, and the
need to expand privatization of water supply and of water and
wastewater treatment facilities to ensure their appropriate,
adequate, development and modernization through increased reliance
on private capital; the unification and centralization of water
management at river basin level in order to handle effectively the
expanding pressures for water availability, for the evaluation of
waterborne disease, for extensive and effective pollution abatement
as well as for coping with the related issues of soil erosion,
siltation in streams, channels and reservoirs, protection against
stress from drought and floods, and with myriad problems relating
to the environment, recreation and navigation. While expanding and
updating the underlying data, the authors maintain the basic
division of the book into four parts. Part I presents the
conceptual framework within which are examined the interacting
elements in the management of water resources and the role of
market in water pricing and in quality-graded quantity of water.
Part II focuses on water quality control, on the nature and impact
of pollution, on water recycling and reuse, and on the prevailing
policy instruments. Part III points to the deficiencies of
engineering solutions in the choice of publicexpenditures needed
for the construction of water systems and stresses the role of
privatization and of centralization at the level of river basins.
Part IV underlines the need for coordinating all supply programs,
projected demand, recycling and reuse. Economics of Water
Resources: From Regulation to Privatization probes the fundamental
concepts concerning the regulation and privatization of water
resources, of water pricing, of public policies concerning the
allocation of water supplied to users, and examines all of the
issues involved in a truly market-determined framework. It aims to
inform and prepare all persons interested in the study and
management of water problems. The book can be used in courses on
water resource management and planning, economics of water
resources, or as a basic reference work on water resources in
general.
This book is concerned with Russia's economic transition from a predominantly feudal economy to a capitalist economy; from an economy based on private ownership, to one based exclusively on state ownership, and finally, from the latter back to private ownership and market-directed relations. These transitions have generated much thought not only in economics, but in history, political science and sociology. Current research in economic transition is commanding great interest; as it reviews methods and outcomes of privatization, along with a variety of problems in economic growth, industrial organization, public economics, international finance and monetary economics.
The appearance of this Second Edition has been encouraged by the
favorable reception of the first. This has offered us the
opportunity to update the materials and to expand the exposition
ofour central theses concerning (1) the integration of water
quantity-quality issues and the treatment of water as a
multi-product commodity, with the market playing a major role in
determining water quality-discriminant pricing; (2) the drawbacks
of public controls, regulation and enforcement, and the need to
expand privatization of water supply and of water and wastewater
treatment facilities to ensure their appropriate development and
modernization through increased reliance on private capital; (3)
the unification and centralization of water management on the river
basin level in order to handle effectively the expanding pressures
for water availability, for the elimination of waterborne disease,
for extensive and effective pollution abatement as well as coping
with the related issues of soil erosion, siltation in streams,
channels, and reservoirs, protection against distress from drought
and floods, and with the myriad problems relating to the
environment, recreation, and navigation. We have maintained the
division ofthe book into four major parts and 12 chapters.
This work focuses on the economic challenges the American economy
has met during the post-World War II era and on the new challenges
- represented notably by the competing economies of Japan, Germany,
and the entire European Union - which confront it as the 21st
century approaches. The book shows how the transformations brought
about by international competition fit into the long-term processes
of economic growth and change with respect to structural mutations,
technological development, the role of government, and the
evolution of government-business relations. Professor Spulber
presents a detailed critique of the thesis alleging that the
American economy has experienced some kind of decline. He
demonstrates not only that such a decline has not taken place but
also that the economy will continue to strengthen if growth and
change are primarily left to emerge from the impulses and
incentives of the private economy.
In this volume, which was originally published in 1979, an essay of
analysis prefaces a collection of translated papers from Eastern
Europe. The juxtaposition of analysis and original documents from
Eastern European authorities (both revered there and disgraced)
enables the reader to join in the experience of interpretation. The
essay (Part I) provides an analysis of the mechanisms of
Soviet-type economies. It concentrates on four issues:
decision-making processes; the limits upon the choices made;
practical implementation of the choices; and the objectives implied
by them. This ends with an explanation of the relatively scant
application of economic principles to the operation of this type of
economic system. Part II is a reader consisting of appropriately
chosen original texts from Eastern European sources grouped into
sections on administration, resource allocation, planning and
incentives. The issues are examined in relation to the special
conditions which brought them to a head.
Russia's Economic Transitions examines the three major
transformations that the country underwent from the early 1860s to
2000. The first transition, under Tsarism, involved the partial
break-up of the feudal framework of land ownership and the move
toward capitalist relations. The second, following the Communist
revolution of 1917, brought to power a system of state ownership
and administration - a sui generis type of war-economy state
capitalism - subjecting the economy's development to central
commands. The third, started in the early 1990s and still
unfolding, is aiming at reshaping the inherited economic fabric on
the basis of private ownership. The three transitions originated
within different settings, but with a similar primary goal, namely
the changing of the economy's ownership pattern in the hopes of
providing a better basis for subsequent development. The
treatment's originality, impartiality and historical breadth have
cogent economic, social and political relevance.
Professor Spulber traces the role of the state in the West and East
for more than two centuries along parallel lines--first from the
creation of the Welfare State in the West, and the Party-State in
the East, to reform of the Western Welfare State by means of
privatization and entitlement changes, to transmutations in the
East through large scale privatizations and the creation of the
"nomenklatura capitalism." He establishes an original connection
between dismantling state enterprises and limitation of government
functions at all levels in the West, and the collapse and then
restructuring of the state on new foundations in the East.
This work focuses on the economic challenges the American economy
has faced during the post-World War II era, and on the new
challenges represented notably by the competing economies of Japan,
Germany, and of the entire European union which confront it as the
21st century approaches. The text presents a detailed critique of
the thesis alleging that the American economy had experienced some
kind of decline, and also argues that the economy will continue to
move forward energetically and successfully if growth and change
are primarily left to emerge from the impulses and incentives of
the private economy. It discusses U.S. economic growth over the
past four decades, focusing on the changing nature of
government-business relations, the strength of U.S. technological
progress and the proliferation of strategic international
alliances, joint venture mergers, and aquisitions of foreign firms
in which the U.S. plays the leading role.
Redefining the State examines in historical perspective the changes
of the role of the state with regard to public ownership and the
scope of welfare in the main industrial and transitional economies.
These changes have given rise to illuminating debates on the
state's size, range, and function, and have involved important
transformations concerning the boundaries between the public and
private sector, the forms and extent of privatization, and the
nature and content of public welfare. These debates and
transformations are of critical importance to understanding the
actual and potential scope of the state in any economy.
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