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VALUASI EKONOMI SUMBERDAYA LAHAN: PASAR LAHAN Diabstraksikan : soemarno, jtnh fpub 2014.

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Presentation on theme: "VALUASI EKONOMI SUMBERDAYA LAHAN: PASAR LAHAN Diabstraksikan : soemarno, jtnh fpub 2014."— Presentation transcript:

1 VALUASI EKONOMI SUMBERDAYA LAHAN: PASAR LAHAN Diabstraksikan : soemarno, jtnh fpub 2014

2 THE LAND MARKET AND NATURAL RESOURCES

3 Suplai Lahan Terbatas (unt semua penggunaan) The supply of land to all uses is fixed Owners receive economic rent Land consists of sites where economic activity takes place (improvement to land are considered capital). Land exists in a fixed supply so its price is entirely determined by demand. The payment to land is pure economic rent. Land is not identical. It differs in fertility, climate, and locational advantages. So, the demand for land is not identical for all units of land. This gives rise to differential rent. Sumber: http://www.personal.psu.edu/~dxl31/econ102/lecture34.html

4 Suplai Lahan untk penggunaan tertentu The supply of land to a given use is upward sloping Land is shifted to its most valuable use (subject to restrictions in zoning laws, etc.) Diunduh dari sumber: http://www.personal.psu.edu/~dxl31/econ102/lecture34.html Although the total supply of land is fixed, the supply of land for a specific use is positively sloped.

5 Sumberdaya Alam Renewable & Non-renewable nonrenewable resources (also known as exhaustible resources) have a finite supply that is depleted as the resource is consumed renewable resources – can be replenished by producers Nonrenewable (exhaustible) supply is fixed, e.g. coal Renewable (nonexhaustible) supply can be replenished, e.g. trees The supply curve for nonrenewable resources slopes upwards because owners are willing to offer more of it as its price rises. As some of the resource is used up, less is available next year. So, unless additional reserves of the resource are found, the supply of the resource decreases and its price rises. Rising interest rates make it more attractive to use up resources today. So, as the interest rate rises more oil is extracted and sold today. Similiar reasoning applies to renewable resources. In general, high interest rate use natural resources quickly low interest rate use natural resources slowly. So, a rise in the interest rate increases the supply of renewable and nonrenewable resources. A fall in the interest leads to a decrease in the supply of both renewable and nonrenewable natural resources. Equilibrium occurs in natural resource markets when the price of the resource rises at the rate of interest. Sumber: http://www.personal.psu.edu/~dxl31/econ102/lecture34.html

6 Harga SDA Non-renewable menurut waktu Price changes over time for nonrenewable resource: 1.Owner may sell a unit today or sell it later at a higher price 2.Owner supplies more today if the expected rate of price increase is less than the interest rate: 1.leads to lower price today and higher price later 3.Owner supplies less today if the expected rate of price increase exceeds the interest rate: 1.leads to higher price today and lower price later 4.In equilibrium – rate of price change = interest rate

7 VALUASI EKONOMI SUMBERDAYA LAHAN: NILAI EKONOMI Diabstraksikan : soemarno, jtnh fpub 2014

8 …KONSEP VALUASI EKONOMI Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm.................... 31/10/2011. Economic value is one of many possible ways to define and measure value. Economic values are useful to consider when making economic choices – choices that involve tradeoffs in allocating LAND resources. Measures of economic value are based on what people want – their preferences. Economists generally assume that individuals are the best judges of what they want. Thus, the theory of economic valuation is based on individual preferences and choices. People express their preferences through the choices and tradeoffs that they make, given certain constraints, such as those on income or available time. The economic value of a particular good or service, is measured by the maximum amount of other things that a person is willing to give up to have that good. Economic value is measured by the most someone is willing to give up in other goods and services in order to obtain a good or services. In a market economy, dollars (or rupiah) are a universally accepted measure of economic value, because the number of dollars that a person is willing to pay for something tells how much of all other goods and services they are willing to give up to get that item. This is often referred to as “willingness to pay.”

9 …KONSEP VALUASI EKONOMI Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm.................... 31/10/2011. When the price of a good increases, people will purchase less of that good. This is referred to as the law of demand—people demand less of something when it is more expensive (assuming prices of other goods and peoples’ incomes have not changed). By relating the quantity demanded and the price of a good, we can estimate the demand function for that good. From this, we can draw the demand curve, the graphical representation of the demand function. It is often incorrectly assumed that a good’s market price measures its economic value. However, the market price only tells us the minimum amount that people who buy the good are willing to pay for it. When people purchase a marketed good, they compare the amount they would be willing to pay for that good with its market price. They will only purchase the good if their willingness to pay is equal to or greater than the price. Many people are actually willing to pay more than the market price for a good, and thus their values exceed the market price. In order to make resource allocation decisions based on economic values, what we really want to measure is the net economic benefit from a good or service. For individuals, this is measured by the amount that people are willing to pay, beyond what they actually pay.

10 The economic benefit to individuals is often measured by consumer surplus. This is graphically represented by the area under the demand curve for a good, above its price. Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm.................... 31/10/2011. The economic benefit to individuals, or consumer surplus, received from a good will change if its price or quality changes. For example, if the price of a good increases, but people’s willingness to pay remains the same, the benefit received (maximum willingness to pay minus price) will be less than before. If the quality of a good increases, but price remains the same, people’s willingness to pay may increase and thus the benefit received will also increase.

11 SURPLUS PRODUSEN Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm.................... 31/10/2011. Producers of goods also receive economic benefits, based on the profits they make when selling the good. Economic benefits to producers are measured by producer surplus, the area above the supply curve and below the market price. The supply function tells how many units of a good producers are willing to produce and sell at a given price. The supply curve is the graphical representation of the supply function. Because producers would like to sell more at higher prices, the supply curve slopes upward. If producers receive a higher price than the minimum price they would sell their output for, they receive a benefit from the sale—the producer surplus. The benefit to producers are similar to benefits to consumers, because they measure the gains to the producer from receiving a price higher than the price they would have been willing to sell the good for.

12 SURPLUS PRODUSEN Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm.................... 31/10/2011. When measuring economic benefits of a policy or initiative that affects an ecosystem, economists measure the total net economic benefit. This is the sum of consumer surplus plus producer surplus, less any costs associated with the policy or initiative.

13 EKONOMI LAHAN… Diunduh dari Sumber: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch6en/conc6en/landeconomics.html.................... 31/10/2011. A quantity of land Q1 would be available at a price of P1. However, what is particular to cities is that the supply is fixed since there is a limited amount of available land. When land is reasonably available (Q1), the price (P1) will be moderate. Moving towards the downtown the demand rises, land becomes scarcer (Q2) and its price goes up (P2). Moving towards the periphery, more land is available, demand drops (Q3), and so does the price (P3). Not every type of activities is willing to pay a price P1. Some may even need a price lower than P3. High land values impose a more intensive usage of space so a higher number of activities can benefit from a central location. The logic behind the construction of skyscrapers is therefore obvious and takes place at optimal locations of competition for land. Different type of activities, each having their own land use, are willing to pay different rents. In a market economy, most of the urban land can be freely sold or purchased. Thus land economics are concerned about how the price of urban land is established and how this price will influence the nature, pattern and distribution of land uses. The figure provides some basic relationships between the quantity of land and its price and assumes that there is a free land market. This market mechanism follows the standard relationship between supply and demand, where an equilibrium price is reached.

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