Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction

Volume: 5 Number: 3 September 1, 2015
  • Chris Jeffords
  • Alexi Thompson
  • David Yerger
EN

Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction

Abstract

A nonrenewable resource extraction model is embedded within a lake model of industry-specific employment, where flows to (from) employment from (to) unemployment depend on the attachment (separation) rate. The attachment and separation rates vary with resource extraction, and the results, driven by the rate of extraction and the remaining resource stock, indicate that changes in the stationary employment level can be positive, negative, or zero. There is a range where the separation rate is decreasing (increasing) and the attachment rate is increasing (decreasing), and the change in employment is determined by the combined effect of these changes. Using data on coal production and employment in the U.S. as a guide, simple calculations provide a range of years beyond 2013 when it is expected that peak employment will be reached in the Marcellus Shale, and the results suggest that employment gains will likely continue for at least a decade.

Keywords

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

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Journal Section

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Authors

Chris Jeffords This is me

Alexi Thompson This is me

David Yerger This is me

Publication Date

September 1, 2015

Submission Date

September 1, 2015

Acceptance Date

-

Published in Issue

Year 2015 Volume: 5 Number: 3

APA
Jeffords, C., Thompson, A., & Yerger, D. (2015). Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, 5(3), 809-815. https://izlik.org/JA77BF57NH
AMA
1.Jeffords C, Thompson A, Yerger D. Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction. IJEEP. 2015;5(3):809-815. https://izlik.org/JA77BF57NH
Chicago
Jeffords, Chris, Alexi Thompson, and David Yerger. 2015. “Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction”. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy 5 (3): 809-15. https://izlik.org/JA77BF57NH.
EndNote
Jeffords C, Thompson A, Yerger D (September 1, 2015) Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy 5 3 809–815.
IEEE
[1]C. Jeffords, A. Thompson, and D. Yerger, “Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction”, IJEEP, vol. 5, no. 3, pp. 809–815, Sept. 2015, [Online]. Available: https://izlik.org/JA77BF57NH
ISNAD
Jeffords, Chris - Thompson, Alexi - Yerger, David. “Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction”. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy 5/3 (September 1, 2015): 809-815. https://izlik.org/JA77BF57NH.
JAMA
1.Jeffords C, Thompson A, Yerger D. Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction. IJEEP. 2015;5:809–815.
MLA
Jeffords, Chris, et al. “Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction”. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, vol. 5, no. 3, Sept. 2015, pp. 809-15, https://izlik.org/JA77BF57NH.
Vancouver
1.Chris Jeffords, Alexi Thompson, David Yerger. Employment Booms and Busts Stemming from Nonrenewable Resource Extraction. IJEEP [Internet]. 2015 Sep. 1;5(3):809-15. Available from: https://izlik.org/JA77BF57NH