On Modeling and Interpreting the Economics of Catastrophic Climate (2007)
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BibTeX
@MISC{Weitzman07onmodeling,
author = {Martin L. Weitzman},
title = {On Modeling and Interpreting the Economics of Catastrophic Climate},
year = {2007}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Abstract—With climate change as prototype example, this paper analyzes the implications of structural uncertainty for the economics of lowprobability, high-impact catastrophes. Even when updated by Bayesian learning, uncertain structural parameters induce a critical “tail fattening” of posterior-predictive distributions. Such fattened tails have strong implications for situations, like climate change, where a catastrophe is theoretically possible because prior knowledge cannot place sufficiently narrow bounds on overall damages. This paper shows that the economic consequences of fat-tailed structural uncertainty (along with unsureness about high-temperature damages) can readily outweigh the effects of discounting in climate-change policy analysis. I.







