In cost-benefit analysis of climate policy there are two main approaches to discounting, each with implications conflicting with our moral intuitions. Thus, discounted utilitarianism implies that we hardly need to protect future generations against climate change, while classical utilitarianism implies that we should reduce our consumption across the board to benefit future generations. The insolubility of the debate derives from the fact that both classical and discounted utilitarianism permit only a single discount rate for all consequences occurring in the same future year, while our intuitions clearly do distinguish between consequences, depending on whether we cause adverse effects on other people's interests and violate their rights. ...
Disagreements about the value of the utility discount rate—the rate at which our concern for the wel...
I argue that the use of a social discount rate to assess the consequences of climate policy is unhel...
There is a time during which aggregate benefits from greenhouse gas emissions dominate costs, but le...
In cost-benefit analysis of climate policy there are two main approaches to discounting, each with i...
Item does not contain fulltextClimate policy-making requires a balancing, however rudimentary, of th...
Climate policy-making requires a balancing, however rudimentary, of the costs of reducing greenhouse...
In the economics of climate change, the future benefits of greenhouse gas emissions abatement are co...
Eric A. Posner and David Weisbach advocate discounting the future impacts of climate policies at the...
The question of which discount rate to choose when it comes to calculating costs and benefits regard...
Empirical evaluation of policies to mitigate climate change has been largely confined to the applica...
Abstract Discounting the utilities of future generations in many problems, such as climate-change an...
I offer a selective review of discounting and climate policy. Analytic and numerical models show tha...
The evaluation of long-term effects of climate change in cost-benefit analysis has a long tradition ...
We defend a methodology of discounting, for the evaluation of the long-term effects of climate polic...
The choice of the rate at which one should discount the long-term benefits of mitigating climate cha...
Disagreements about the value of the utility discount rate—the rate at which our concern for the wel...
I argue that the use of a social discount rate to assess the consequences of climate policy is unhel...
There is a time during which aggregate benefits from greenhouse gas emissions dominate costs, but le...
In cost-benefit analysis of climate policy there are two main approaches to discounting, each with i...
Item does not contain fulltextClimate policy-making requires a balancing, however rudimentary, of th...
Climate policy-making requires a balancing, however rudimentary, of the costs of reducing greenhouse...
In the economics of climate change, the future benefits of greenhouse gas emissions abatement are co...
Eric A. Posner and David Weisbach advocate discounting the future impacts of climate policies at the...
The question of which discount rate to choose when it comes to calculating costs and benefits regard...
Empirical evaluation of policies to mitigate climate change has been largely confined to the applica...
Abstract Discounting the utilities of future generations in many problems, such as climate-change an...
I offer a selective review of discounting and climate policy. Analytic and numerical models show tha...
The evaluation of long-term effects of climate change in cost-benefit analysis has a long tradition ...
We defend a methodology of discounting, for the evaluation of the long-term effects of climate polic...
The choice of the rate at which one should discount the long-term benefits of mitigating climate cha...
Disagreements about the value of the utility discount rate—the rate at which our concern for the wel...
I argue that the use of a social discount rate to assess the consequences of climate policy is unhel...
There is a time during which aggregate benefits from greenhouse gas emissions dominate costs, but le...