Equilibrium to equilibrium dynamics in a climate change economy

"Different from past economic research, I incorporate recent theories by climatologists that burning fossil fuels increases the equilibrium level of carbon dioxide, CO2, in the atmosphere into a macroeconomic growth model. In the model, both production and consumption produces $CO_2$ emissions....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Song, Edward
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Munich 2016
MPRA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-013212483149-equilibrium-to-equilibrium-dyn.htm
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author Song, Edward
author_facet Song, Edward
collection Library items
description "Different from past economic research, I incorporate recent theories by climatologists that burning fossil fuels increases the equilibrium level of carbon dioxide, CO2, in the atmosphere into a macroeconomic growth model. In the model, both production and consumption produces $CO_2$ emissions. I also assume that Anthropogenic Global Warming, AGW, not only damages production, but also capital stock and utility. In addition, a boundary condition similar to the Simpson-Kombayashi-Ingersoll (SKI) Limit holds, that there exists a critical temperature which leads to runaway greenhouse warming. Under these assumptions with no alternative fuel sources, and unlimited fossil fuel supply, the economy eventually flat lines (dies). Abatement only delays the inevitable. Using discount factors of .95 and .99, modest abatement policy can increase world welfare but do not increase life expectancy. When the discount factor is zero, conclusions of which policy is best is sensitive to the time horizon policy makers use. If a 100 year time horizon is used, modest consumption abatement may be the best policy, which may actually decrease life expectancy. However, a theoretical infinite time horizon may imply near zero emissions as the growth of damages is reduced and the probability of survival increases. Unfortunately, because humans have finite lives, this creates an ethical dilemma. In order for society to be better off, the current living must sacrifice by accepting policies that lead them to experience near zero output, consumption and near zero lifetime utility and welfare."
format TEXT
id 013212483149_eeb7fcb7381d4759a7ed13312af3bce5
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 013212483149_eeb7fcb7381d4759a7ed13312af3bce5
is_hierarchy_title Equilibrium to equilibrium dynamics in a climate change economy
language English
physical 61 p.
Digital
publishDate 2016
publisher Munich
MPRA
spellingShingle Song, Edward
climate change
economic growth
environmental policy
gas emission
welfare state
Equilibrium to equilibrium dynamics in a climate change economy
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=105861392304
title Equilibrium to equilibrium dynamics in a climate change economy
topic climate change
economic growth
environmental policy
gas emission
welfare state
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-013212483149-equilibrium-to-equilibrium-dyn.htm