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Social discounting, inequality aversion, and the environment

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  • Venmans, Frank
  • Groom, Ben

Abstract

Measures of inequality aversion are elicited using hypothetical decision tasks. The tasks require an assessment of projects in the presence of environmental inequalities across space and time. We also test the effect of different environmental domains (air pollution, recreational forest and soil fertility) and contextual framings (gain/loss, within/between regions and present–future/past–present inter-temporal trade-offs). Estimated mean inequality aversion is higher in the intra-temporal framing (an elasticity of 2.9), than in the inter-temporal framing with either negative (2.0) or positive (1.4) growth in environmental quality. Differences across environmental domains exist but are less pronounced. Similar results hold for pure time preference. Losses are associated with a lower pure rate of time preference but higher inequality aversion compared to gains. The results indicate how domain-specific ‘dual’ discount rates or rather changing relative shadow prices for the environment might be calibrated. Yet, seen as an exercise in empirical social choice, the context dependent results reject the classical Utilitarian formulation of a single Ramsey Rule.

Suggested Citation

  • Venmans, Frank & Groom, Ben, 2021. "Social discounting, inequality aversion, and the environment," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 110739, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
  • Handle: RePEc:ehl:lserod:110739
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    More about this item

    Keywords

    social discount rate; inequality; inequality aversion; cost benefit analysis; Ramsey rule; ES/R009708/1; UKRI block grant;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • D31 - Microeconomics - - Distribution - - - Personal Income and Wealth Distribution
    • H43 - Public Economics - - Publicly Provided Goods - - - Project Evaluation; Social Discount Rate
    • D61 - Microeconomics - - Welfare Economics - - - Allocative Efficiency; Cost-Benefit Analysis

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