Published in

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2016

DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2844100

Nature Research, Nature Climate Change, 6(7), p. 443-449, 2017

DOI: 10.1038/nclimate3298

SSRN Electronic Journal

DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2830444

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Priority for the Worse Off and the Social Cost of Carbon

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The social cost of carbon (SCC) is a monetary measure of the harms from carbon emission. Specifically, it is the reduction in current consumption that produces a loss in social welfare equivalent to that caused by the emission of a ton of CO2. The standard approach is to calculate the SCC using a discounted-utilitarian social welfare function (SWF)—one that simply adds up the well-being numbers (utilities) of individuals, as discounted by a weighting factor that decreases with time. The discounted-utilitarian SWF has been criticized both for ignoring the distribution of well-being, and for including an arbitrary preference for earlier generations. Here, we use a prioritarian SWF, with no time-discount factor, to calculate the SCC in the integrated assessment model RICE. Prioritarianism is a well-developed concept in ethics and theoretical welfare economics, but has been, thus far, little used in climate scholarship. The core idea is to give greater weight to well-being changes affecting worse off individuals. We find substantial differences between the discounted-utilitarian and non-discounted prioritarian SCC.