Title of article
Economics, ethics, and climate policy: framing the debate
Author/Authors
Richard B. Howarth، نويسنده , , Patricia A. Monahan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Pages
13
From page
187
To page
199
Abstract
This paper examines the economic and ethical dimensions of climate policy in light of existing knowledge of the impacts of global warming and the costs of greenhouse gas emissions abatement. We find that the criterion of economic efficiency, operationalized through cost-benefit analysis, is ill-equipped to cope with the pervasive uncertainties and issues of intergenerational fairness that characterize climate change. In contrast, the concept of sustainable development—that todayʹs policies should ensure that future generations enjoy life opportunities undiminished relative to the present—is a normative criterion that explicitly addresses the uncertainties and distributional aspects of global environmental change. If one interprets the sustainability criterion to imply that it is morally wrong to impose catastrophic risks on unborn generations when reducing those risks would not noticeably diminish the quality of life of existing persons, a case can be made for significant steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Journal title
Global and Planetary Change
Serial Year
1996
Journal title
Global and Planetary Change
Record number
704166
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