Climate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbon

The optimal reaction to a climate tipping point that becomes more imminent with global warming is to be precautionary in adjusting capital to prepare for the calamity and to price carbon to make catastrophic change less imminent. The saving response can be positive or negative. If the mean lag for t...

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Main Authors: Van Der Ploeg, F, De Zeeuw, A
Format: Journal article
Published: Oxford University Press 2017
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author Van Der Ploeg, F
De Zeeuw, A
author_facet Van Der Ploeg, F
De Zeeuw, A
author_sort Van Der Ploeg, F
collection OXFORD
description The optimal reaction to a climate tipping point that becomes more imminent with global warming is to be precautionary in adjusting capital to prepare for the calamity and to price carbon to make catastrophic change less imminent. The saving response can be positive or negative. If the mean lag for the impact of the catastrophe is long enough, the saving response will be negative, because the precautionary return in the Keynes-Ramsey rule becomes negative. We also show the separate effects of the elasticity of intertemporal substitution (EIS) and the relative risk aversion (RRA) using Duffie-Epstein preferences. Focusing on a productivity catastrophe, we calibrate our model and show how sensitive the policy responses are to the degrees of EIS and RRA, the trend rate of economic growth, the hazard rate, and how long it takes for the catastrophe to have its full impact.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e724ab9e-ba01-42ab-89d3-67c6cd4cb9a02022-03-27T10:36:25ZClimate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbonJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e724ab9e-ba01-42ab-89d3-67c6cd4cb9a0Symplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2017Van Der Ploeg, FDe Zeeuw, AThe optimal reaction to a climate tipping point that becomes more imminent with global warming is to be precautionary in adjusting capital to prepare for the calamity and to price carbon to make catastrophic change less imminent. The saving response can be positive or negative. If the mean lag for the impact of the catastrophe is long enough, the saving response will be negative, because the precautionary return in the Keynes-Ramsey rule becomes negative. We also show the separate effects of the elasticity of intertemporal substitution (EIS) and the relative risk aversion (RRA) using Duffie-Epstein preferences. Focusing on a productivity catastrophe, we calibrate our model and show how sensitive the policy responses are to the degrees of EIS and RRA, the trend rate of economic growth, the hazard rate, and how long it takes for the catastrophe to have its full impact.
spellingShingle Van Der Ploeg, F
De Zeeuw, A
Climate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbon
title Climate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbon
title_full Climate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbon
title_fullStr Climate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbon
title_full_unstemmed Climate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbon
title_short Climate tipping and econimic growth: precautionary capital and the price of carbon
title_sort climate tipping and econimic growth precautionary capital and the price of carbon
work_keys_str_mv AT vanderploegf climatetippingandeconimicgrowthprecautionarycapitalandthepriceofcarbon
AT dezeeuwa climatetippingandeconimicgrowthprecautionarycapitalandthepriceofcarbon