Working Paper

Evaluating Climate Policies by the Pareto Principle: Efficiency When Future Identities Are Unobservable

Geir B. Asheim, Kohei Kamaga, Stéphane Zuber
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9575

Climate change is an externality since those who emit greenhouse gases do not pay the long-term negative consequences of their emissions. In view of the resulting inefficiency, it has been claimed that climate policies can be evaluated by the Pareto principle. However, climate policies lead to different identities of future people, implying that the Pareto principle is not applicable. Assuming that there are infinitely many future people whose identities are not observable, we specify conditions under which their spatiotemporal positions do not matter. This implies that the Suppes-Sen principle whereby ranked streams are compared plays an important role and justifies that following dominance relation: A state a is said to dominate another state b if a Pareto dominates b for existing people and Suppes-Sen dominates b for future people, with at least one of the two being strict. We illustrate the consequences of this dominance definition for policy choice.

CESifo Category
Resources and Environment
Energy and Climate Economics
Keywords: climate change, efficiency, intergenerational equity, population ethics, infinite streams
JEL Classification: D610, D630, D710, Q540