PART I: Climate Change – Our Approach 2A Ethical Frameworks and Intertemporal Equity
Online Access
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.167.6227http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/d/Chapter_2_Technical_Annex.pdf
Abstract
2A.1 Ethical frameworks for climate change The ‘consequentialist ’ and ‘welfarist ’ approach, the assessment of a policy in terms of its consequences for individual welfare, that is embodied in standard welfare economics, is highly relevant to the ethics of climate change. In Section 2.3 we described the standard approach to ethics in welfare economics i.e. the evaluation of actions in terms of their consequences for consumption by individuals of goods and services. We emphasised that “goods and services ” in consumption were multidimensional and should be interpreted broadly. In this appendix we examine that approach in a little more detail and compare it with different ethical perspectives of relevance to the economics of climate change. For many applications of the standard theory, the community is defined as the nation-state and the decision-maker is interpreted as the government. Indeed this is often seen as sufficiently obvious as to go unstated. This is not, of course, intended to deny the complexities and pressures of political systems: the results of this approach should be seen as an ethical benchmark rather than a descriptive model of how political decisions are actually taken.Date
2010-07-16Type
textIdentifier
oai:CiteSeerXPSU:10.1.1.167.6227http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.167.6227