Environmental Protection, Rare Disasters, and Discount Rates
2014.06.17 2164
ARI
Seminar: Harvard Economics Professor
Robert J. Barro Title: Environmental
Protection, Rare Disasters, and Discount Rates Organizers: The Asiatic Research Institute and the Department of Economics, Korea University
World-renowned economist Robert J.
Barro, professor of economics at Harvard University and a
senior fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, gave
a lecture on his recent research, titled “Environmental Protection, Rare
Disasters, and Discount Rates.” The event was organized jointly by the Asiatic Research Institute and the Department of Economics at Korea University on June 3, 2014.
Professor Barro began his lecture by
criticizing the assumption made by Stern Review in regards to near-zero
discount rates in environmental protection investments and the assumption that
as the pure rate of time increases, the discount rate increases, and,
subsequently environmental investment decreases. Adopting a principle set out
by Martin Weitzman, Professor Barro analyzed optimal choice in environmental
policy to determine the amount of investment needed in order to lessen the
potential impact of natural disasters.
Professor Barro raises two questions,
including the
degree to which reducing the probability of environmental disasters is
worthwhile as well as the extent to which investments can lower this
probability. By focusing on the impacts that environment
investment can have on the probability of environmental disasters, Professor Barro
has come up with new models
that capture the dynamics of disasters.
Departing from Stern Review’s analysis, Professor
Barro focused on his main model which states that as risk aversion increases,
the probability of disasters decreases, meaning that an increase in return on
equity would increase the size of environmental investment. In his new
analysis, the optimal environmental investment ratio and the associated disaster
probability are constant, since the ratio of investment for environmental
protection slowly increases up to a steady state value. Therefore, granted that
these variables remain constant, Professor Barro argued that when the pure rate
of time preference is low, all expected real rates of return are also low;
consequently, investment in relation to GDP increase and the probability of
disasters, in turn, become smaller
In
conclusion, what Professor Barro gathered from his research was that optimal environmental investment is correlated to both relative
risk aversion and to a decrease in the probability and average size of
environmental disasters; however, this correlation decreases with higher degrees
of uncertainty towards policy effectiveness. The two key parameters that must
be determined beforehand are, first, the proportionate effect of environmental
investment on the probability of environmental disaster and, second, the
baseline probability of environmental disasters. The
seminar was held for approximately two hours, followed by a Q&A session.
Professor Barro voiced the hope that his new analysis can ultimately contribute to
environmental protection.
Date: June 3, 2014
Venue: Room 201, College of
Political Science and Economics, Korea University