2013
DOI: 10.1126/science.1235665
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Determining Benefits and Costs for Future Generations

Abstract: The United States and others should consider adopting a different approach to estimating costs and benefits in light of uncertainty.

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Cited by 349 publications
(192 citation statements)
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“…(Arrow et al 2013;Gollier 2008)), and I therefore also use a rate that starts at 4 % and decreases exponentially with a 250 year time constant (i.e. the percentage rate is 4*exp(−t/250) where t is the time in years) which approximates the mean behavior seen in several prior studies discussed in Arrow et al (2013). Note that the framework employed here does not directly include any economic response to environmental damages other than the backstop assumption.…”
Section: Basic Climate Damagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…(Arrow et al 2013;Gollier 2008)), and I therefore also use a rate that starts at 4 % and decreases exponentially with a 250 year time constant (i.e. the percentage rate is 4*exp(−t/250) where t is the time in years) which approximates the mean behavior seen in several prior studies discussed in Arrow et al (2013). Note that the framework employed here does not directly include any economic response to environmental damages other than the backstop assumption.…”
Section: Basic Climate Damagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, authors have argued for the use of a declining discount rate (DDR) (e.g. (Arrow et al 2013;Gollier 2008)), and I therefore also use a rate that starts at 4 % and decreases exponentially with a 250 year time constant (i.e. the percentage rate is 4*exp(−t/250) where t is the time in years) which approximates the mean behavior seen in several prior studies discussed in Arrow et al (2013).…”
Section: Basic Climate Damagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The choice of a discount rate has, therefore, enormous consequences for long-run environmental planning [2,3]. For example, in a highly influential report on climate change commissioned by the UK government, Stern [4] uses a discounting rate of 1.4%, which on a 100-year horizon implies a present value of 25% (meaning the future is worth 25% as much as the present).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Letting interest rates be a proxy for economic growth, a different version of the same argument is that the technologies of the future will be so powerful that they will dwarf anything we can achieve with present-day technologies. Thus it is more effective to follow policies that foster economic growth than to try to combat global warming now [2][3][4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We then contrasted land purchase scenarios developed by All properties selected in land purchase Marxan solutions were also used as candidates for 123 covenants under the assumption of willing owners in both cases. We did not estimate change in 124 land value given covenants as there is no clear consensus on its magnitude or direction 125 (Anderson and Weinhold, 2008 because the alternative of using discount rates equal to the inflation rate for costs incurred over 133 time and reporting in future dollar values, has been shown to be highly sensitive to the discount 134 rate chosen, leading to substantial uncertainties about future dollar amounts (Arrow et al, 2013). 135…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%