Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse

This paper shows that the use of hyperbolic discounting in environmental regulation can have unfortunate consequences. In a three-period model we demonstrate that a planner who `naively` employs hyperbolic discounting and fails to anticipate problems of dynamic inconsistency, can oversee a collapse...

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Main Author: Cameron Hepburn
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4d5e21ba-fe57-4c08-a3f0-ad08fa88db09
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:oxf:wpaper:159 2024-04-14T08:08:55+00:00 Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse Cameron Hepburn https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4d5e21ba-fe57-4c08-a3f0-ad08fa88db09 unknown https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4d5e21ba-fe57-4c08-a3f0-ad08fa88db09 preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:38:08Z This paper shows that the use of hyperbolic discounting in environmental regulation can have unfortunate consequences. In a three-period model we demonstrate that a planner who `naively` employs hyperbolic discounting and fails to anticipate problems of dynamic inconsistency, can oversee a collapse of a renewable resource. If the regeneration rate of the resource is within a given range, and stock levels are close to the `minimum viable population`, then an unforeseen collapse will result. This basic result is shown to hold in an infinite-horizon, continuous-time model with hyperbolic discounting of the sort examined in Barro (1999) and Li and Lofgren (2001). Here, the naive planner does not anticipate extinction of its resource stock because it always plans to lower consumption (but it never does). Two conclusions follow from these results. First, the model provides an explanation for resource collapses such as that of the Peruvian anchovy and Atlantic cod. Second, governments should think carefully before they employ hyperbolic discounting in policymaking. hyperbolic discounting, time-inconsistency, renewable resources Report atlantic cod RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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language unknown
description This paper shows that the use of hyperbolic discounting in environmental regulation can have unfortunate consequences. In a three-period model we demonstrate that a planner who `naively` employs hyperbolic discounting and fails to anticipate problems of dynamic inconsistency, can oversee a collapse of a renewable resource. If the regeneration rate of the resource is within a given range, and stock levels are close to the `minimum viable population`, then an unforeseen collapse will result. This basic result is shown to hold in an infinite-horizon, continuous-time model with hyperbolic discounting of the sort examined in Barro (1999) and Li and Lofgren (2001). Here, the naive planner does not anticipate extinction of its resource stock because it always plans to lower consumption (but it never does). Two conclusions follow from these results. First, the model provides an explanation for resource collapses such as that of the Peruvian anchovy and Atlantic cod. Second, governments should think carefully before they employ hyperbolic discounting in policymaking. hyperbolic discounting, time-inconsistency, renewable resources
format Report
author Cameron Hepburn
spellingShingle Cameron Hepburn
Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse
author_facet Cameron Hepburn
author_sort Cameron Hepburn
title Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse
title_short Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse
title_full Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse
title_fullStr Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse
title_full_unstemmed Hyperbolic Discounting and Resource Collapse
title_sort hyperbolic discounting and resource collapse
url https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4d5e21ba-fe57-4c08-a3f0-ad08fa88db09
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genre_facet atlantic cod
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