University of WisconsinCoxhead, Ian2016-04-192016-04-192002Philippine Journal of Development 29(1): 127-1500115-9143http://hdl.handle.net/10919/65417Metadata only recordThis paper examines the complex, non-linear relationships between economic growth and environmental degradation that are apparent in the variety of experiences in the recent history of many tropical Asian economies. Numerous factors influence the growth-environment interactions, including the composition of production and consumption, new techniques and environmental policies, security of natural resource property rights, and pollution regulation and liability. Furthermore, environmental and economic policies are not distinct; an economic policy on resource allocation is also inherently an environmental policy. The current government trend of decentralizing is increasingly placing the burden of environmental management and policy design on local governments. This is an especially pressing responsibility for communities in Asias uplands, where sustainable natural resource management is urgently needed to reverse the escalating environmental damage resulting from agricultural expansion and intensification.text/plainen-USIn CopyrightEconomic growthDeforestationSustainable developmentEconomic policyEnvironmental impactsGovernment policySoilMarketsEconomic impactsDecentralizationNatural resource managementAgricultureProperty rightsUpland agricultureEnvironmental degradationThe PhilippinesEnvironmental policyAgricultural expansionAgricultural intensificationEnvironmental Kuznets Curve (EKC)Structural changesImport substitutionFood policyMarginal landInstitutional developmentPolicy designNatural resources and environmentEnvironmental managementEconomy-environment linkageWatershedDevelopment and the upland resource base: economic and policy context, and lessons from a Philippine watershedAbstractReproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.