This paper estimates the true economic income of Peru’s metal mining sector for the period 1992–2006,
using a model of green economic income based on Hamilton (2000). The total depletion of natural
capital caused by metal mining is calculated by estimating, on the one hand, the depreciation of mining
resources (using the Hotelling rent approach) and, on the other, the environmental degradation
provoked by metal mining activities. The results show that the total loss of natural capital represents
between 31% and 51% of the metal mining GDP and between 2% and 4.9% of Peru’s GDP. On the other
hand, correcting the usual GDP measure produced by the traditional National Account System (NAS) for
the total loss of natural capital caused by mining activities shows that the GDP traditional measure
overestimated by 51–64% the true economic income generated by Peruvian’s metal mining sector
during the period 1992–2006. The importance of the generation, taxation, and disposition of mining
economic rents for Peru’s sustainable development in the future is also discussed