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Abstract
We assume that people value employment not only to earn income to satisfy their consumption needs
but also as a means of community/social involvement that provides socio-psychological
(non-pecuniary) benefits. We show that the latter incentive can encourage full employment harvesting
resources and explain why poor resource-based communities may exhaust a natural resource in a finite
time even if there is a sustainable path of resource consumption available. We show that communities
could sustain their natural resources by using outside-the-community employment and economic
diversification, but, to be effective, such policies must ensure that the outside wage rate and the initial
capital stock are above certain minimum levels, which will be higher the longer these policies are
delayed.