Early-demographic dividend | Adjusted savings: net forest depletion (% of GNI)

Net forest depletion is calculated as the product of unit resource rents and the excess of roundwood harvest over natural growth. Limitations and exceptions: A positive net depletion figure for forest resources implies that the harvest rate exceeds the rate of natural growth; this is not the same as deforestation, which represents a change in land use. In principle, there should be an addition to savings in countries where growth exceeds harvest, but empirical estimates suggest that most of this net growth is in forested areas that cannot currently be exploited economically. Because the depletion estimates reflect only timber values, they ignore all the external and nontimber benefits associated with standing forests.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Early-demographic dividend
Records
63
Source
Early-demographic dividend | Adjusted savings: net forest depletion (% of GNI)
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
0.24842243 1970
0.21925494 1971
0.21943095 1972
0.31317025 1973
0.24548287 1974
0.35265503 1975
0.2454512 1976
0.5244404 1977
0.48008186 1978
0.2634833 1979
0.2548364 1980
0.26548872 1981
0.42768197 1982
0.26564213 1983
0.22864859 1984
0.1751899 1985
0.28307482 1986
0.27876399 1987
0.27656027 1988
0.28206876 1989
0.30885872 1990
0.31434611 1991
0.3063273 1992
0.24166045 1993
0.25277073 1994
0.34692001 1995
0.31413529 1996
0.27458607 1997
0.28523556 1998
0.20829114 1999
0.1764874 2000
0.17722222 2001
0.21220762 2002
0.27168081 2003
0.20483519 2004
0.17894347 2005
0.18519428 2006
0.21771358 2007
0.23090404 2008
0.23104498 2009
0.22793219 2010
0.21719862 2011
0.21007413 2012
0.20833707 2013
0.23164436 2014
0.25331431 2015
0.26689521 2016
0.23791286 2017
0.1637073 2018
0.16209484 2019
0.19509053 2020
0.20273375 2021
2022

Early-demographic dividend | Adjusted savings: net forest depletion (% of GNI)

Net forest depletion is calculated as the product of unit resource rents and the excess of roundwood harvest over natural growth. Limitations and exceptions: A positive net depletion figure for forest resources implies that the harvest rate exceeds the rate of natural growth; this is not the same as deforestation, which represents a change in land use. In principle, there should be an addition to savings in countries where growth exceeds harvest, but empirical estimates suggest that most of this net growth is in forested areas that cannot currently be exploited economically. Because the depletion estimates reflect only timber values, they ignore all the external and nontimber benefits associated with standing forests.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Early-demographic dividend
Records
63
Source