Discounting and relative prices in assessing future environmental damages
Abstract
Environmentalists are often upset at the effect of discounting costs of future environmental damage, e.g. due to climate change. An often overlooked message is that we should discount costs but also take into account the increase in the relative price of the ecosystem service endangered. The effect of discounting would thus be counteracted, and if the rate of price rise of the item was fast enough it might even be reversed. The scarcity that leads to rising relative prices for the environmental good will also have direct effects on the discount rate itself. The magnitude of these effects depends on properties of the economy’s technology and on social preferences. We develop a simple model of the economy that illustrates how changes in crucial technology and preference parameters may affect both the discount rate and the rate of change of values of environmental goods. The combined effect of discounting and the change of values of environmental goods is more likely to be low, or even negative, the lower is the growth rate of environmental quality (or the larger its decline rate) and the lower is the elasticity of substitution between environmental quality and produced goods.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2006Author
Sterner, Thomas
Hoel, Michael
Keywords
Discounting; future costs; scarcity; environment; climate change
Publication type
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 199
Language
en