文档介绍:PART I: Climate Change – Our Approach
2 Economics, Ethics and Climate Change
Key Messages
Climate change is a result of the externality associated with greenhouse-gas emissions –
it entails costs that are not paid for by those who create the emissions.
It has a number of features that together distinguish it from other externalities:
• It is global in its causes and consequences;
• The impacts of climate change are long-term and persistent;
• Uncertainties and risks in the economic impacts are pervasive.
• There is a serious risk of major, irreversible change with non-marginal economic
effects.
These features shape the economic analysis: it must be global, deal with long time horizons,
have the economics of risk and uncertainty at its core, and examine the possibility of major,
non-marginal changes.
The impacts of climate change are very broad ranging and interact with other market
failures and economic dynamics, giving rise to plex policy problems. Ideas
and techniques from most of the important areas of economics, including many recent
advances, have to be deployed to analyse them.
The breadth, magnitude and nature of impacts imply that several ethical perspectives,
such as those focusing on welfare, equity and justice, freedoms and rights, are
relevant. Most of these perspectives imply that the es of climate-change policy are to
be understood in terms of impacts on consumption, health, education and the environment
over time but different ethical perspectives may point to different policy mendations.
Questions of intra- and inter-generational equity are central. Climate change will have
serious impacts within the lifetime of most of those alive today. Future generations will be
even more strongly affected, yet they lack representation in present-day decisions.
Standard externality and cost-benefit approaches have their usefulness for analysing
climate change, but, as they a