ere3: ethics foundations –why is ethics so important? –alternative views, including the standard...

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ERE3: Ethics • Foundations – Why is ethics so important? – Alternative views, including the standard economic position • Time dimensions – Discounting – Sustainability

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Page 1: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

ERE3: Ethics

• Foundations– Why is ethics so important?– Alternative views, including the

standard economic position

• Time dimensions– Discounting– Sustainability

Page 2: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Last week

• The origins of the sustainability problem– State of the environment– Growth and the environment– The environmental Kuznets curve

• Concepts of sustainability– Definitions, meanings,

conceptualisations

Page 3: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Why Ethics?

• Environmental economics is about the allocation, distribution and use of environmental resources

• Some of these questions are positive, many are normative

• Mainstream economics is based on a utilitarian ethic

• Utilitarianism is not universally accepted, applied environmental economists are constantly confronted with this

Page 4: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Foundations

• Naturalist moral philosophy• Humanist moral philosophy

– Libertarianism– Utilitarianism

• Social welfare• Distributional implications• Intertemporal welfare• Rawls• Other criticism

Page 5: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Naturalism

• Most ethics reason from a human perspective, either attributing values to humans only or letting humans be the only source of value

• Naturalist moral philosophy extends moral rights to other species– Higher animals– Sentient beings– Living beings– Beings in existence

Page 6: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Libertarianism

• Individual rights and liberties• Primacy of process• Locke: Original property is just if acquired through

labour• Nozick: Property is just if obtained through free

consent• No concept of consequential justice• No role for distributional policy• Government has a role in:

– Unjust holdings– Open access, common property– Externalities

Page 7: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Utilitarianism

• Individual pleasure, happiness, well-being• Individual utility and social welfare• Primacy of outcome• No concept of procedural justice• Government policy should strive for the

greatest good for the greatest number• Narrow: utility is individual, human utility;

welfare is sum of utilities• Broad: utility includes altruism and future

availability

Page 8: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

From utilities to welfare

• How should an economy be ruled?• Welfare is some function of utilities• Cardinal or ordinal utility functions?• What are the implications?

– Interpersonal comparisons– Policy implications

Page 9: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Social welfare functions

• Individual utility

• Social welfare• What functional form?

i i iU U X

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1

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d d0 ; 0

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Page 10: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Welfare maximisation

Amax s.t. XA B BW U U X X

A A B B A BL U X U X X X X

d d0; 0

d dA B

A A B B

L U L U

X X X X

0A B

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d d

d dA B

A B

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Solution requires: Equality of the individual‘s marginal utilities

Page 11: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Z

XB

W2

0

XA

XA*

W1

W3

XB*

XXX BA

Maximisation of social welfare subject to a constraint on the total

quantity of goods available

if , A B A BU U X X

Page 12: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

XA* XA XB* XB

UB*

UA*

UBUA

Maximisation of social welfare for two individuals with different utility functions

Are equal weights fair?

Page 13: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Rawls• Justice is what everyone would agree to if

all were free, rational and impartial: – Veil of ignorance: Skills, position, attitude

• Fundamental principles– Maximum liberty, no infringement on

other‘s liberties– Resource difference only if

• It makes everyone better off• Attached to position

• Often reinterpreted in a utilitarian way: maximise the worst off– Rawls may have disagreed with that

Page 14: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

45°

0U1

BA U,UminW

U2

W

e

c d b

Rawlsian social welfare function indifference curve

Page 15: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Other criticism

• Naturalism, libertarianism• Utility is too narrow, there is more

than goods and services, e.g., freedom

• Besides individual utility, there is altruism and responsibility

• Utilitarianism may lead to repugnant conclusions

Page 16: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Examples of decision-making problems

• The problems– Reducing air pollution in Santiago– Protecting the habitat of the California

gnatcatcher– Costs and benefits of the Three Gorges dam

• How might the outcome differ depending on – Social choice mechanism– Composition of society

Page 17: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Intertemporal Welfare

• p is the utility discount rate (p>0)• Future utility counts less• What is the rationale for discounting?

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0 1

0 10

...1 1 1 1

t TT t

T tt

U U U UW

Possible functional form using weights:

Page 18: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Discounting

0 1t

tt

UW

0

dtt

t

W U e t

0% 1% 10%

Year 0 100 100 100

Year 50 100 60 0.85

Year 100 100 37 0.07

Page 19: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Utility and Consumption

• Consumption discount rate r=ρ+ηg• It is the rate at which the value of a

small increment of consumption changes as its date is delayed

0

dtt t

t

W U C e t

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2

d: '( ) 0

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Page 20: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

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Marginal utility ofconsumption

Marginal utility to time

Elasticity ofmarignal utility

Cr

C

Consumption discount rate

Page 21: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Numerical Values?

• r=ρ+ηg• ρ is the utility discount rate, measures

how much we care about the future• ηg reflects that future consumers are

better off• η (elasticity of marginal utility) is usually

assumed to lie between 1 and 2• g (growth rate of consumption) can be

observed• ρ is controversial

Page 22: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Numerical Values? (2)

• There is no ethical position that defends ρ>0

• Indeed, Ramsey, Harrod, and Koopmans said ρ=0

• Yet, market and government behaviour suggest otherwise ...

• It would not be wise to set different discount rates for different projects

Page 23: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Interest rates

• Interest rate = discount rate = rate of return on capital

• Higher values• Only allowed if there are no market

failures• Only allowed if properly corrected for

differences in risk• There are arguments why a government

should correct behaviour, and arguments why not

Page 24: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Sustainable Development

• Adjust social welfare function to incorporate sustainability– Solow: Intergenerational equity a la Rawls equate utility over time– Pezzey: Change the arguments in the utility

function

• Impose constraints– Capital, natural capital, utility

• Adjust discount rate– Lower exponential discount rate, non-

exponential discount rate

Page 25: ERE3: Ethics Foundations –Why is ethics so important? –Alternative views, including the standard economic position Time dimensions –Discounting –Sustainability

Alternative Discount Rates

• Lind, Rabl, Schelling: Discounting is only allowable within the life-time of a single decision maker, as the presumed capital transfers are not possible between generations

• Heal: Observations in psychology show that people use lower discount rates for problems with longer time horizons

• Weitzman: The certainty equivalent of an uncertain discount rate resembles a discount rate that declines over time