MegaCatálogo Bibliográfico
Centro de Documentación. FCEyS. UNMdP

- Recursos bibliográficos en papel y digitales -
- libros, artículos de revistas, ponencias de eventos, etc. -

» Resultado: 2 registros

Registro 1 de 2
Autor: Bretschger, Lucas - Karydas, Christos
Título: Economics of climate change: introducing the Basic Climate Economic (BCE) model
Fuente: Environment and Development Economics. v.24, n.6. Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics; Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Páginas: pp. 560-582
Año: dec. 2019
Resumen: Environmental economics models are often too complex to be communicated in an illustrative manner. For this reason, this paper develops the Basic Climate Economic (BCE) model that features core elements of macroeconomic and climate economic modelling, while allowing for an illustrative examination of the development path. The BCE model incorporates fossil stock depletion, pollution stock accumulation, endogenous growth, and climate-induced capital depreciation. We first use graphical analysis to show the effects of climate change and climate policy on economic development. Intuition for the different model mechanisms, the functional forms, and the effects of different climate policies is provided. We then show the model equations in mathematical terms to derive closed-form solutions and to run model simulations relating to the graphical part. Finally, we compare our setup to other models of climate economics.
Palabras clave: CAMBIO CLIMATICO | ECONOMIA | MODELOS |
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA E + datos de Fuente
Registro 2 de 2
Autor: Bretschger, Lucas - 
Título: Climate policy and equity principles: fair burden sharing in a dynamic world
Fuente: Environment and Development Economics. v.18, n.5. Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics; Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Páginas: pp. 517-536
Año: Oct. 2013
Resumen: The paper argues that negotiation costs can prevent the international community from finding a new international climate agreement. To define a feasible way of facilitating the negotiation process, I analyze basic equity principles and their relationship to climate policy and economic development. Based on the most relevant principles, I propose a general synthetic rule for burden sharing in international climate policy. The rule avoids complexity and comprises both egalitarian and cost-sharing aspects, which appears to be crucial for achieving a climate agreement. Carbon budgets for the different countries are calculated under different parameter assumptions.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA E + datos de Fuente

*** No hay más registros para visualizar ***

>> Nueva búsqueda <<

Inicio