Why any estimate of the cost of climate change will be flawed
Temperature fluctuations are unpredictable. Humans are even more so
When William Nordhaus, who would later win a Nobel prize in economics, modelled the interaction between the economy and the atmosphere he represented the “damage function”—an estimate of harm done by an extra unit of warming—as a wiggly line. So little was known about the costs of climate change that he called it “terra incognita”, unknown land, compared with the “terra infirma”, shaky ground, of the costs of preventing it. Eventually, a rough calculation gave him an estimate that 1-2% of global GDP would be lost from a 3°C rise in temperature. This was no more than an “informed hunch”, he wrote in 1991.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Mindmelting problems”
Finance & economics June 1st 2024
- Baby-boomers are loaded. Why are they so stingy?
- Foreign investors are rejecting Indian stocks
- Xi Jinping’s surprising new source of economic advice
- Young collectors are fuelling a boom in Basquiat-backed loans
- OPEC heavyweights are cheating on their targets
- When to sell your stocks
- Why any estimate of the cost of climate change will be flawed
Discover more
Germany’s economy goes from bad to worse
Things may look brighter next year, but the relief will be short-lived
An economics Nobel for work on why nations succeed and fail
Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James Robinson tackled the most important question of all
Why investors should still avoid Chinese stocks
The debate about “uninvestibility” obscures something important
China’s property crisis claims more victims: companies
Unsold homes are contributing to a balance-sheet recession
Europe’s green trade restrictions are infuriating poor countries
Only the poorest can expect help to cushion the blow
How America learned to love tariffs
Protectionism hasn’t been this respectable for decades