One of the most controversial areas of economics is the practice of discounting: attaching a lower weight to future costs and benefits than present costs and benefits. Discounting appears to offend notions of sustainable development and the interests of future generations. Recent advances in the theory of discounting hold out strong hope that the ‘tyranny of discounting’ can be avoided through the use of time varying discount rates (TVDRs). This paper reviews the recent rationales for TVDRs and applies the results to issues such as nuclear power and global warming control
The social rate of discount is a crucial driver of the social cost of carbon (SCC), i.e. the expecte...
textabstractControversies about time discounting loom large in decisions about climate change. Promi...
A constant social discount rate cannot reflect both a reasonable opportunity cost of public funds an...
The last few years have witnessed important advances in our understanding of time preference and soc...
I review the justifications given for discounting future benefits relative to present, and distingui...
Discussions about applied Cost Benefit Analysis are incomplete without the thorny issue of discounti...
This review will focus on the question of discounting. The paper begins with an outline of the expec...
Giving the future less weight than the present when making decisions is known as temporal or time di...
This working note provides a basic overview of discounting in the context of climate change policy. ...
Mainstream economists have begun voicing disquiet about how dicounting affects values ascribed to th...
International audienceThe use of a Declining Discount Rate (DDR), in cost-benefit analysis (CBA), co...
In the economics of climate change, the future benefits of greenhouse gas emissions abatement are co...
Recent modelling of the costs and benefits of climate change has renewed debate surrounding assumpti...
The question of which discount rate to choose when it comes to calculating costs and benefits regard...
the use of a Constant Discount Rate, implies that the policy maker will put relatively more effort t...
The social rate of discount is a crucial driver of the social cost of carbon (SCC), i.e. the expecte...
textabstractControversies about time discounting loom large in decisions about climate change. Promi...
A constant social discount rate cannot reflect both a reasonable opportunity cost of public funds an...
The last few years have witnessed important advances in our understanding of time preference and soc...
I review the justifications given for discounting future benefits relative to present, and distingui...
Discussions about applied Cost Benefit Analysis are incomplete without the thorny issue of discounti...
This review will focus on the question of discounting. The paper begins with an outline of the expec...
Giving the future less weight than the present when making decisions is known as temporal or time di...
This working note provides a basic overview of discounting in the context of climate change policy. ...
Mainstream economists have begun voicing disquiet about how dicounting affects values ascribed to th...
International audienceThe use of a Declining Discount Rate (DDR), in cost-benefit analysis (CBA), co...
In the economics of climate change, the future benefits of greenhouse gas emissions abatement are co...
Recent modelling of the costs and benefits of climate change has renewed debate surrounding assumpti...
The question of which discount rate to choose when it comes to calculating costs and benefits regard...
the use of a Constant Discount Rate, implies that the policy maker will put relatively more effort t...
The social rate of discount is a crucial driver of the social cost of carbon (SCC), i.e. the expecte...
textabstractControversies about time discounting loom large in decisions about climate change. Promi...
A constant social discount rate cannot reflect both a reasonable opportunity cost of public funds an...