Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-017-2094-x
Title: The comparative importance for optimal climate policy of discounting, inequalities and catastrophes
Authors: Budolfson, M
Dennig, F 
Fleurbaey, M
Siebert, A
Socolow, R.H
Keywords: Cost benefit analysis
Costs
Carbon price
Climate policy
Damage functions
Integrated assessment models
Integrated modeling
Mitigation costs
Social cost of carbon
Time preferences
Climate models
carbon cycle
climate change
climate modeling
comparative study
environmental economics
environmental policy
integrated approach
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Citation: Budolfson, M, Dennig, F, Fleurbaey, M, Siebert, A, Socolow, R.H (2017). The comparative importance for optimal climate policy of discounting, inequalities and catastrophes. Climatic Change 145 (3-Apr) : 481-494. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-017-2094-x
Abstract: Integrated assessment models (IAMs) of climate and the economy provide estimates of the social cost of carbon and inform climate policy. With the Nested Inequalities Climate Economy model (NICE) (Dennig et al. PNAS 112:15,827–15,832, 2015), which is based on Nordhaus’s Regional Integrated Model of Climate and the Economy (RICE), but also includes inequalities within regions, we investigate the comparative importance of several factors—namely, time preference, inequality aversion, intraregional inequalities in the distribution of both damage and mitigation cost and the damage function. We do so by computing optimal carbon price trajectories that arise from the wide variety of combinations that are possible given the prevailing range of disagreement over each factor. This provides answers to a number of questions, including Thomas Schelling’s conjecture that properly accounting for inequalities could lead the inequality aversion parameter to have an effect opposite to what is suggested by the Ramsey equation. © 2017, The Author(s).
Source Title: Climatic Change
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/175147
ISSN: 0165-0009
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-017-2094-x
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