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Derived Demand for Irrigation Water: The California Aqueduct*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2015

C. Richard Shumway*
Affiliation:
North Carolina State University

Extract

Estimation of the demand function for area resources is a major concern of many regional economic analyses. Resource demand is dependent upon several variables, including the nature of demand for the products, supply of other inputs, degree of substitutability of inputs, the time period available for adjustment, and market structure. A major problem is how to explicitly consider these important variables in a reasonable manner with limited research means. This paper reports the application of one approach, a regional linear programming allocation model for California, to the derivation of demand for irrigation water as a productive input to agriculture in one developing subregion – the West Side of the San Joaquin Valley.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Southern Agricultural Economics Association 1973

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Footnotes

*

North Carolina State University Agricultural Experiment Station Paper No. 4133. My appreciation is due Gordon King, Harold Carter, and Gerald Dean, J. A. Seagraves, Richard Perrin, Leon Danielson, and the Journal referees for constructive suggestions.

References

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[3]California Department of Water Resources, Feasibility of Serving the Kern County Water Agency from the State Water Project, Bulletin 119-8, Sacramento, 1963.Google Scholar
[4]California Department of Water Resources, Investigation of Alternative Aqueduct Systems to Serve Southern California, Bulletin 78, Appendix D, Sacramento, 1960.Google Scholar
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