McCulloch, Scrope, and Hodgskin: Nineteenth-Century Versions of Julian Simon
William S. Kern
Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2003, vol. 25, issue 3, 289-301
Abstract:
In The Ultimate Resource (1981, 1996), and in many other publications over the last several decades, Julian Simon put forth controversial views regarding the connection between natural resource scarcity, population growth, and economic progress. Simon argued, in contrast to those espousing the limits to growth, that natural resources were not getting scarcer, but more abundant, and that a large and growing population was an asset rather than a liability in the pursuit of economic growth.
Date: 2003
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