Climate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they are

<p>Policy can change people's preferences. For example, how cities are designed has an impact on future preferences about modes of transport, even after people move. We examine the normative significance of such preference formation for climate policy design, in which such effects are com...

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Main Authors: Mattauch, L, Hepburn, C
Format: Journal article
Published: Wiley 2016
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author Mattauch, L
Hepburn, C
author_facet Mattauch, L
Hepburn, C
author_sort Mattauch, L
collection OXFORD
description <p>Policy can change people's preferences. For example, how cities are designed has an impact on future preferences about modes of transport, even after people move. We examine the normative significance of such preference formation for climate policy design, in which such effects are commonly ignored. Yet, on the long time scales that climate policy must consider, it is likely to change preferences. We argue that this is of high relevance for the adequate evaluation of mitigation options. We further argue that the orthodox approach of addressing environmental concerns with marginal pricing and Pigouvian taxes is missing a key element. Policies that change preferences can influence the cost of carbon mitigation, and hence change the optimal carbon tax rate. As an attempt to assist in policy making with endogenous preferences, we examine alternatives to preference satisfaction for normative economics. Some new arguments for and against established positions in welfare theory are considered. We conclude that substantive welfare criteria, or perhaps a reinterpretation of the standard liberal approach to welfare as about <em>fundamental</em> preferences, may serve as a better guide to policy where preferences are endogenous.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:9eeb5226-b20d-4f82-9dbe-92d792dff5622022-03-27T00:53:29ZClimate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they areJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9eeb5226-b20d-4f82-9dbe-92d792dff562Symplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2016Mattauch, LHepburn, C<p>Policy can change people's preferences. For example, how cities are designed has an impact on future preferences about modes of transport, even after people move. We examine the normative significance of such preference formation for climate policy design, in which such effects are commonly ignored. Yet, on the long time scales that climate policy must consider, it is likely to change preferences. We argue that this is of high relevance for the adequate evaluation of mitigation options. We further argue that the orthodox approach of addressing environmental concerns with marginal pricing and Pigouvian taxes is missing a key element. Policies that change preferences can influence the cost of carbon mitigation, and hence change the optimal carbon tax rate. As an attempt to assist in policy making with endogenous preferences, we examine alternatives to preference satisfaction for normative economics. Some new arguments for and against established positions in welfare theory are considered. We conclude that substantive welfare criteria, or perhaps a reinterpretation of the standard liberal approach to welfare as about <em>fundamental</em> preferences, may serve as a better guide to policy where preferences are endogenous.</p>
spellingShingle Mattauch, L
Hepburn, C
Climate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they are
title Climate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they are
title_full Climate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they are
title_fullStr Climate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they are
title_full_unstemmed Climate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they are
title_short Climate policy when preferences are endogenous— and sometimes they are
title_sort climate policy when preferences are endogenous and sometimes they are
work_keys_str_mv AT mattauchl climatepolicywhenpreferencesareendogenousandsometimestheyare
AT hepburnc climatepolicywhenpreferencesareendogenousandsometimestheyare