On Becoming an Environmental EconomistPosted on
February 19, 2013 by
Robert Stavins 内含种种关于环境经济学界的八卦。

My essay this month represents a departure from my standard blog posts about a contemporary environmental policy issue. Rather, it is of a more personal nature, and stems from the fact that the second volume of my collected papers has just been published by
Edward Elgar,
Economics of Climate Change and Environmental Policy: Selected Papers of Robert N. Stavins, 2000-2011 (2013), a successor to the first volume, published in 2000,
Environmental Economics and Public Policy: Selected Papers of Robert N. Stavins, 1988-1999.
-
When the publisher invited me to collect my papers in these edited volumes, it was suggested that I write a personal introduction in which I might reflect on the professional path that led to my research and writing. I did this, and the introductory chapter of the second volume contains my latest reflections on that path. This essay essentially consists of an abbreviated version. My hope is that some readers will find it of interest, particularly students and others who aspire to work in this exciting and growing field.
-
A Professional Path
Over the past two decades, environmental and resource economics has evolved from what was once a relatively obscure application of welfare economics to a prominent field of economics in its own right. The number of articles on the natural environment appearing in mainstream economics periodicals has continued to increase, as has the number of economics journals dedicated exclusively to environmental and resource topics. Likewise, the influence of environmental economics on public policy has increased significantly, particularly as greater use has been made of market-based instruments for environmental protection.
-
In retrospect, my own professional path may now appear somewhat direct, if not altogether linear, but it hardly seemed so as I traveled along it. The path I describe below took me back and forth across the United States and to several continents, and it took me from physics to philosophy, to agricultural extension, to international development studies, to agricultural economics, and eventually to environmental economics. It culminated in my receipt in 1988 of a Ph.D. degree in economics at
Harvard University, where I have since been a faculty member at the
John F. Kennedy School of Government. During this time, much has changed in the profession.
-
Early Days at Harvard
The early ascendency of the field of environmental economics, during the period from 1970 to 1990, was centered within departments of agricultural and resource economics, mainly at U.S. universities, and at
Resources for the Future (RFF), the Washington research institution. Within most economics departments, however, environmental studies remained a relatively minor area of applied welfare economics. So, when I enrolled in the
Ph.D. program in Harvard’s
Department of Economics in 1983, and when I received my degree five years later, no field of study was offered in the field of environmental or resource economics.
-
Fortunately, Harvard permitted its graduate students to develop an optional, self-designed field as one of two “special fields” on which they were to be examined orally before proceeding to dissertation research. Without an active environmental economist in the Department of Economics (
Robert Dorfman had retired, and
Martin Weitzman had yet to move to Harvard from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology), I developed an outline and reading list of the field through correspondence with leading scholars from other institutions, most prominently
Kerry Smith, then at
North Carolina State University. My proposal to prepare for and be examined in the special field of environmental and resource economics (along with econometrics) was approved by the Department’s director of graduate study,
Dale Jorgenson. So began my entry into the scholarly literature.