Discounting Across Generations: Necessary, not Suspect
Article first published online: 23 MAY 2002
DOI: 10.1111/0272-4332.206072
Additional Information
How to Cite
Belzer, R. B. (2000), Discounting Across Generations: Necessary, not Suspect. Risk Analysis, 20: 779–792. doi: 10.1111/0272-4332.206072
Publication History
- Issue published online: 23 MAY 2002
- Article first published online: 23 MAY 2002
- Abstract
- Cited By
Keywords:
- Economics;
- ethics;
- discounting;
- intergenerational equity
Periodically, ethical objections are raised against the practice of discounting for future effects. Concerns about the potential effects on future generations from long-term nuclear waste disposal and global climate change have caused these ethical objections to recur. This article rebuts the various ethical objections to future discounting on practical, ethical, and analytic grounds. Discounting for future effects is a ubiquitous practice that cannot be practically prevented. In the event that public policy would dictate against future discounting in public decisions, such a constraint could never be successfully imposed on markets. Market values will always reflect the full, discounted streams of future effects even if governments prohibited the practice among individuals. Ethically, there is no basis for choosing an upper-bound time horizon beyond which discounting should be rejected. Any proposed horizon is arbitrary and has no obvious foundation. All decisions are fundamentally irreversible, so opponents of future discounting also must define a degree of irreversibility beyond which normal discounting should not apply, and defend on ethical grounds the basis for this demarcation. This task is further complicated by the likelihood that choices are rarely, if ever, as irreversible as opponents suggest. Typical examples given to prove future discounting is inappropriate overstate the degree of irreversibility actually present and understate subsequent opportunities for modifications. Finally, opposition to distant-future discounting on the ground that burdens are shifted to future generations must face the fact that such shifts are characteristic of intergenerational transfers now practiced widely and with great public support.

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