000205761 001__ 205761 000205761 005__ 20250221175727.0 000205761 0247_ $$2doi$$a10.22004/ag.econ.205761 000205761 037__ $$a330-2016-13703 000205761 041__ $$aeng 000205761 245__ $$aThe Economic Climate: Establishing Consensus on the Economics of Climate Change 000205761 260__ $$c2015-05-27 000205761 269__ $$a2015-05-27 000205761 270__ $$mHowardP@exchange.law.nyu.edu$$pHoward, Peter H. 000205761 270__ $$mderek.sylvan@nyu.edu$$pSylvan, Derek 000205761 300__ $$a61 000205761 336__ $$aConference Paper/ Presentation 000205761 500__ $$aCover page, abstract, Tables, and Appendix are included in addition to the 40 page length of the article. 000205761 520__ $$aWhile the scientific community has established a fairly clear consensus on the threat of climate change, policymakers and journalists often suggest that the economic community lacks a consensus view on climate change risks and appropriate policy responses. We conducted a survey of 1,103 experts on the economics of climate change – all those who have authored an article related to climate change in a highly ranked economics or environmental economics journal since 1994 – and our results reveal several areas where expert consensus exists, and others where more research is necessary. In casting a wider net than many previous surveys of economists on climate change, we avoid many of the pitfalls of previous studies. Of the 1,103 experts that received the survey, 365 responded – a response rate of approximately 33%. Though the response rate varied from question to question – particularly for open-ended questions – it never dipped below 20%. There are several key takeaways from our results, particularly with respect to the magnitude of the social cost of carbon. Economic experts believe that climate change will begin to have a net negative impact on the global economy very soon – the median estimate was “by 2025.” On average, economists also predict far higher economic impacts from climate change than the estimates found in landmark surveys from the 1990s (Nordhaus, 1994; Schauer, 1995). Also while experts on climate economics did not support a constant discount rate calibrated to market rates – the current methodology employed to estimate the US social cost of carbon –respondents recommended rates lower than (or roughly equal to the lower ranges of) those used by the U.S. government in these calculations. Given these results, it is unsurprising that our findings revealed a strong consensus that the SCC should be greater than or equal to the current $37 estimate. While these results indicate a growing consensus that current damage and SCC impacts are too low, the high variance of our results indicate that considerable work is still necessary to improve the values used for discount rates and climate impact assumptions. From a policy perspective, our findings also strongly suggest that U.S. policymakers should be concerned about a lack of action on climate change. Experts believe that the United States may be able to strategically induce other nations to reduce GHG emissions by adopting policies to reduce U.S. emissions. Respondents also support unilateral emission reductions by the United States, regardless of the actions other nations have taken. These results appear to confirm an economic consensus that domestic climate policies should be enacted immediately to address climate change. 000205761 546__ $$aEnglish 000205761 650__ $$aEnvironmental Economics and Policy 000205761 650__ $$aResource/Energy Economics and Policy 000205761 650__ $$aRisk and Uncertainty 000205761 6531_ $$aClimate change 000205761 6531_ $$aSurvey 000205761 6531_ $$aSocial cost of carbon 000205761 6531_ $$aClimate damages 000205761 6531_ $$aIntergenerational discounting 000205761 6531_ $$aInternational climate agreements 000205761 700__ $$aHoward, Peter H. 000205761 700__ $$aSylvan, Derek 000205761 773__ $$q1$$o77$$d2015 000205761 8564_ $$997b49999-b4a5-4358-8a54-d4c6adb0f58e$$s1462916$$uhttps://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/205761/files/AAEA_HowardSylvan_2015_Update.pdf 000205761 887__ $$ahttp://purl.umn.edu/205761 000205761 909CO $$ooai:ageconsearch.umn.edu:205761$$pGLOBAL_SET 000205761 912__ $$nSubmitted by Peter Howard (howardp@exchange.law.nyu.edu) on 2015-05-28T01:03:21Z No. of bitstreams: 1 AAEA2015_HowardSylvan.pdf: 1177395 bytes, checksum: 4ba71a703965772745e0beb1ec67f21b (MD5) 000205761 912__ $$nMade available in DSpace on 2015-05-28T01:03:22Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 AAEA2015_HowardSylvan.pdf: 1177395 bytes, checksum: 4ba71a703965772745e0beb1ec67f21b (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-05-27 000205761 913__ $$aLicense granted by Peter Howard (howardp@exchange.law.nyu.edu) on 2015-05-28 (GMT): <center> <h2> Deposit Agreement </h2> </center> I represent that I am the creator of the digital material identified herein (&ldquo;Work&rdquo;). I represent that the work is original and that I either own all rights of copyright or have the right to deposit the copy in a digital archive such as AgEcon Search. I represent that in regard to any non-original material included in the Work I have secured written permission of the copyright owner (s) for this use or believe this use is allowed by law. I further represent that I have included all appropriate credits and attributions. I hereby grant the Regents of the University of Minnesota (&ldquo;University&rdquo;), through AgEcon Search, a non-exclusive right to access, reproduce, and distribute the Work, in whole or in part, for the purposes of security, preservation, and perpetual access. I grant the University a limited, non-exclusive right to make derivative works for the purpose of migrating the Work to other media or formats in order to preserve access to the Work. I do not transfer or intend to transfer any right of copyright or other intellectual property to the University. If the Deposit Agreement is executed by the Author�s Representative, the Representative shall separately execute the following representation: I represent that I am authorized by the Author to execute this Deposit Agreement on behalf of the Author. 000205761 980__ $$a330 000205761 982__ $$gAgricultural and Applied Economics Association>2015 AAEA & WAEA Joint Annual Meeting, July 26-28, San Francisco, California