Consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty

The principles which guide non-renewable resource use are based partly on theoretical investigations of the consequences and the merits of use, which are both uncertain. Existing economic approaches to uncertainty do not correctly reflect a decision-maker's position in time. The power to determ...

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Main Author: Baker, W. R.
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Environmental Sciences 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/4316
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-43162015-03-30T15:30:27ZConsistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertaintyBaker, W. R.The principles which guide non-renewable resource use are based partly on theoretical investigations of the consequences and the merits of use, which are both uncertain. Existing economic approaches to uncertainty do not correctly reflect a decision-maker's position in time. The power to determine future decisions is overstated, and a limited range of objectives can be investigated. These problems are addressed by developing a new approach to choice over long time periods. The approach is recursive: each of a sequence of decision-makers decides on the immediate action to take, given the expected consequences, among which are the future actions. Each decision- maker forecasts how future decisions will be made by forecasting what the future decision-makers' objectives and options will be. The resulting forecast actions are consistent: there is no foreseen reason why they will later need revision. Virtually any sequence of objectives can be investigated with the approach. Applying it to non-renewable resource use over three periods reveals that the optimal initial use: changes if future decision-makers use discount rates different from the first; changes if the future discount rates become uncertain; changes with a change in the time at which future technological improvements become known.University of Canterbury. Environmental Sciences2010-08-20T04:10:29Z2010-08-20T04:10:29Z1988Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/4316enNZCUCopyright W. R. Bakerhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
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language en
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description The principles which guide non-renewable resource use are based partly on theoretical investigations of the consequences and the merits of use, which are both uncertain. Existing economic approaches to uncertainty do not correctly reflect a decision-maker's position in time. The power to determine future decisions is overstated, and a limited range of objectives can be investigated. These problems are addressed by developing a new approach to choice over long time periods. The approach is recursive: each of a sequence of decision-makers decides on the immediate action to take, given the expected consequences, among which are the future actions. Each decision- maker forecasts how future decisions will be made by forecasting what the future decision-makers' objectives and options will be. The resulting forecast actions are consistent: there is no foreseen reason why they will later need revision. Virtually any sequence of objectives can be investigated with the approach. Applying it to non-renewable resource use over three periods reveals that the optimal initial use: changes if future decision-makers use discount rates different from the first; changes if the future discount rates become uncertain; changes with a change in the time at which future technological improvements become known.
author Baker, W. R.
spellingShingle Baker, W. R.
Consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty
author_facet Baker, W. R.
author_sort Baker, W. R.
title Consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty
title_short Consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty
title_full Consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty
title_fullStr Consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty
title_full_unstemmed Consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty
title_sort consistent dynamic choice, non-renewable resource use, and uncertainty
publisher University of Canterbury. Environmental Sciences
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/4316
work_keys_str_mv AT bakerwr consistentdynamicchoicenonrenewableresourceuseanduncertainty
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