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Declining Discount Rates: The Long and the Short of it
Authors:Ben?Groom  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:bg@soas.ac.uk"   title="  bg@soas.ac.uk"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Cameron?Hepburn,Phoebe?Koundouri,David?Pearce
Affiliation:(1) Department of Economics, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK;(2) St Hugh’s College, Environmental Change Institute and Department of Economics, Oxford University, UK;(3) Department of Business, Department of Economics, Reading University, UK;(4) Department of Economics, University College London, UK
Abstract:The last few years have witnessed important advances in our understanding of time preference and social discounting. In particular, several rationales for the use of time-varying social discount rates have emerged. These rationales range from the ad hoc to the formal, with some founded solely in economic theory while others reflect principles of intergenerational equity. While these advances are to be applauded, the practitioner is left with a confusing array of rationales and the sense that almost any discount rate can be justified. This paper draws together these different strands and provides a critical review of past and present contributions to this literature. In addition to this we highlight some of the problems with employing DDRs in the decision-making process, the most pressing of which may be time inconsistency. We clarify their practical implications, and potential pitfalls, of the more credible rationales and argue that some approaches popular in environmental economics literature are ill-conceived. Finally, we illustrate the impact of different approaches by examining global warming and nuclear power investment. This includes an application and extension of Newell and Pizer [‘Discounting the benefits of climate change mitigation : how much do uncertain rates increase valuations?’ Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 46 (2003) 52] to UK interest rate data.
Keywords:global warming  intergenerational equity  social cost benefit analysis  time inconsistency  uncertainty  time varying discount rates
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