Pham Do, KHHouba, HZhu, X2012201256th Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society annual conference, 2012, pp. 1 - 15https://hdl.handle.net/10179/10356The Mekong River is shared by six Asian countries. Over the years there has been both conáict and cooperation on managing the water resources to meet population growth, climate change and the desire for economic development. This paper exploits an axiomatic bargaining approach to examine how China and the Mekong River Commission (MRC) might negotiate e§ective joint management. We show that there are signiÖcant welfare gains from cooperation in this region; an exogenous budget provides stronger incentives for cooperation; and the MRC should be extended to include all a§ected nations for sustainable management and future development. The economic costs of the current weak governance and its e§ects on the negotiated joint management are discussed..Jan-15Transboundary water management: A joint management approach to the Mekong River BasinConference Paper204310Massey_Dark