Working Paper

Relative Prices and Climate Policy: How the Scarcity of Non-Market Goods Drives Policy Evaluation

Moritz A. Drupp, Martin C. Hänsel
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8052

Climate change not only impacts production and market consumption, but also the relative scarcity of non-market goods, such as environmental amenities. We study fundamental drivers of the resulting relative price changes, their potential magnitude, and their implications for climate policy in Nordhaus’ prominent DICE model, thereby addressing one of its key criticisms. We propose plausible ranges for these relative prices changes based on best available evidence. Our central calibration reveals that accounting for relative prices is equivalent to decreasing pure time preference by 0.6 percentage points and leads to a more than 50 percent higher social cost of carbon.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Energy and Climate Economics
Keywords: climate policy, discounting, non-market goods, social cost of carbon, substitutability
JEL Classification: Q010, Q540, H430, D610, D900