Technological Opportunities and Growth in the Natural Resource Sector
Abstract
Both technological and natural resource possibilities seem to evolve in cycles. The “Resource
Opportunity Model” in this paper introduces the technological opportunity thinking into natural resource
modeling. The natural resource industries’ choice between incremental, complementary innovations, and
drastic, breakthrough innovations, will give rise to long-run cycles in the so-called familiar resource
stock, which is the amount of natural resources determined by the prevailing paradigm. Incremental
innovations will increase the exhaustion of the stock, and drastic innovations will create a new paradigm
and, thereby, new technological opportunities and a new stock of familiar resources. Drastic innovations
are endogenously affected by the knowledge level and induced either by scarcity of technological
opportunities or by scarcity of resources. Generally, increased innovation ability increases the knowledge
stock and cumulative income over time, but does not affect the sustainability of the resource stock even
though the intensity of the resource cycles increases. However, too low innovation ability might drive the
sector into technological stagnation, and resource exhaustion in the long run; and too high innovation
ability might drive the sector into extraction stagnation, and resource exhaustion in the short run.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2003Author
Lundström, Susanna
Keywords
Cycles; Economic growth; Induced innovations; Natural resources´; Paradigm shifts;
Technological opportunities;
Publication type
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 116
Language
sv_SE