Carbon Prices for the Next Hundred Years
Author(s) -
Gerlagh Reyer,
Liski Matti
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the economic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.683
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1468-0297
pISSN - 0013-0133
DOI - 10.1111/ecoj.12436
Subject(s) - economics , carbon price , climate change , global warming , carbon fibers , natural resource economics , greenhouse gas , social cost , economy , microeconomics , ecology , materials science , composite number , composite material , biology
This article examines the socially optimal pricing of carbon emissions over time when climate‐change impacts are unknown, potentially high‐consequence events. The carbon price tends to increase with income. But learning about impacts, or their absence, decouples the carbon price from income growth. The price should grow faster than the economy if the past warming is not substantial enough for learning the true long‐run social cost. It grows slower than the economy as soon as the warming generates information about events that could have arrived but have not done so. A quantitative assessment shows that the price grows roughly at the rate of the economy for the next 100 years.
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