R. Carson's research while affiliated with University of California, San Diego and other places

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Publications (1)


Figure 1 of 1
Opportunities for advances in climate change economics
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April 2016

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1,954 Reads

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136 Citations

Science

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C. D. Kolstad

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There have been dramatic advances in understanding the physical science of climate change, facilitated by substantial and reliable research support. The social value of these advances depends on understanding their implications for society, an arena where research support has been more modest and research progress slower. Some advances have been made in understanding and formalizing climate-economy linkages, but knowledge gaps remain [e.g., as discussed in ( 1 , 2 )]. We outline three areas where we believe research progress on climate economics is both sorely needed, in light of policy relevance, and possible within the next few years given appropriate funding: (i) refining the social cost of carbon (SCC), (ii) improving understanding of the consequences of particular policies, and (iii) better understanding of the economic impacts and policy choices in developing economies.

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Citations (1)


... Understanding these dynamics is of the utmost importance for countries for which, as in the case of Colombia, the use of adaptation strategies like air conditioning is severely low (under 5% of buildings (Statista Research Depart-ment, 2023)). Third, and more importantly, using an exogenous shock to the stakes of the exam, we provide quasi-experimental evidence revealing that exerting effort becomes increasingly costly as individuals are exposed to increasing temperature levels and, therefore, provide evidence of an adaptation mechanism elusive so far in the literature (Burke et al., 2016). Moreover, we provide correlational evidence of a mechanism of opportunity costs that supports both the predictions of our theoretical model and our causal analysis. ...

Reference:

Sweating Bullets: Heat, High-Stakes Evaluations, and the Role of Incentives
Opportunities for advances in climate change economics

Science