Authors
Kenneth J Arrow, Maureen L Cropper, Christian Gollier, Ben Groom, Geoffrey M Heal, Richard G Newell, William D Nordhaus, Robert S Pindyck, William A Pizer, Paul R Portney, Thomas Sterner, Richard SJ Tol, Martin L Weitzman
Publication date
2014/7/1
Journal
Review of Environmental Economics and Policy
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Description
Should governments use a discount rate that declines over time when evaluating the future benefits and costs of public projects? The argument for using a declining discount rate (DDR) is simple: if the discount rates that will be applied in the future are uncertain but positively correlated, and if the analyst can assign probabilities to these discount rates, then the result will be a declining schedule of certainty-equivalent discount rates. There is a growing empirical literature that estimates models of long-term interest rates and uses them to forecast the DDR schedule. However, this literature has been criticized because it lacks a connection to the theory of project evaluation. In benefit-cost analysis, the net benefits of a project in year t (in consumption units) are discounted to the present at the rate at which society would trade consumption in year t for consumption in the present. With simplifying assumptions, this leads to …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KJ Arrow, ML Cropper, C Gollier, B Groom, GM Heal… - Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 2014
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