Uncertainty

被引:0
|
作者
Farber, Daniel A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Energy & Resources Grp, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENVIRONMENTAL-LAW; SENSITIVITY; AMBIGUITY; ECONOMICS; IMPACTS; MODELS; POLICY;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Many of the pressing policy issues facing us today require confronting the unknown and making difficult choices in the face of limited information. Economists distinguish between "uncertainty" (where the likelihood of the peril is nonquantifiable) and "risk" (where the likelihood is quantifiable). Uncertainty is particularly pernicious in situations in which catastrophic outcomes are possible, but conventional decision tools are not equipped to cope with these potentially disastrous results. This Article focuses on situations in which uncertainty, particularly about catastrophic outcomes, is a dominant factor The Article describes new analytic tools for assessing potential catastrophic outcomes and applies them to some key policy issues: controlling greenhouse gases, adapting to unavoidable climate change, regulating nanotechnology, dealing with long-lived nuclear waste, and controlling financial instability. More specifically, economic modeling and policy analysis are often based on the assumption that extreme harms are highly unlikely, in the technical sense that the "tail" of the probability distributions is "thin"-in ogler words, that it approaches rapidly to zero. Thin tails allow extreme risks to be given relatively little weight. A growing body of research, however focuses on the possibility of fat tails, which are common in systems with feedback between different components. As it turns out, fat tails and uncertainty often go together. Economic theories of "ambiguity" deal at a more general level with situations in which multiple plausible models of reality confront a decision maker Ambiguity theories are useful in considering systems with fat tails and in other situations in which the probabilities are simply difficult to quantify. The Article considers both the policy implications of fat tails and the use of ambiguity theories such as alpha-maxmin.
引用
收藏
页码:901 / 959
页数:59
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Smiling in the rain: Seven reasons to be positive about uncertainty in hydrological modelling
    Juston, John M.
    Kauffeldt, Anna
    Quesada Montano, Beatriz
    Seibert, Jan
    Beven, Keith J.
    Westerberg, Ida K.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2013, 27 (07): : 1117 - 1122
  • [2] Bridges beyond renewable energy: Decarbonizing the global electricity sector under uncertainty
    Wendling, Zachary A.
    ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2019, 48 : 235 - 245
  • [3] Irrigation, risk aversion, and water right priority under water supply uncertainty
    Li, Man
    Xu, Wenchao
    Rosegrant, Mark W.
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2017, 53 (09) : 7885 - 7903
  • [4] The ambiguities of uncertainty: A review of uncertainty frameworks relevant to the assessment of environmental change
    Bevan, Luke D.
    FUTURES, 2022, 137
  • [5] Scientific uncertainty and climate change: Part I. Uncertainty and unabated emissions
    Lewandowsky, Stephan
    Risbey, James S.
    Smithson, Michael
    Newell, Ben R.
    Hunter, John
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2014, 124 (1-2) : 21 - 37
  • [6] Qualifying uncertainty of precipitation projections over China: mitigating uncertainty with emergent constraints
    Zhang, Jinge
    Li, Chunxiang
    Zhao, Tianbao
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2024, 6 (07):
  • [7] Uncertainty of wheat water use: Simulated patterns and sensitivity to temperature and CO2
    Cammarano, Davide
    Rotter, Reimund P.
    Asseng, Senthold
    Ewert, Frank
    Wallach, Daniel
    Martre, Pierre
    Hatfield, Jerry L.
    Jones, James W.
    Rosenzweig, Cynthia
    Ruane, Alex C.
    Boote, Kenneth J.
    Thorburn, Peter J.
    Kersebaum, Kurt Christian
    Aggarwal, Pramod K.
    Angulo, Carlos
    Basso, Bruno
    Bertuzzi, Patrick
    Biernath, Christian
    Brisson, Nadine
    Challinor, Andrew J.
    Doltra, Jordi
    Gayler, Sebastian
    Goldberg, Richie
    Heng, Lee
    Hooker, Josh
    Hunt, Leslie A.
    Ingwersen, Joachim
    Izaurralde, Roberto C.
    Mueller, Christoph
    Kumar, Soora Naresh
    Nendel, Claas
    O'Leary, Garry J.
    Olesen, Jorgen E.
    Osborne, Tom M.
    Palosuo, Taru
    Priesack, Eckart
    Ripoche, Dominique
    Semenov, Mikhail A.
    Shcherbak, Iurii
    Steduto, Pasquale
    Stockle, Claudio O.
    Stratonovitch, Pierre
    Streck, Thilo
    Supit, Iwan
    Tao, Fulu
    Travasso, Maria
    Waha, Katharina
    White, Jeffrey W.
    Wolf, Joost
    FIELD CROPS RESEARCH, 2016, 198 : 80 - 92
  • [8] Uncertainty Spillovers for Markets and Policy
    Hansen, Lars Peter
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECONOMICS, VOL 13, 2021, 2021, 13 : 371 - 396
  • [9] Justifying precautionary policies: Incommensurability and uncertainty
    Aldred, Jonathan
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2013, 96 : 132 - 140
  • [10] Addressing uncertainty in adaptation planning for agriculture
    Vermeulen, Sonja J.
    Challinor, Andrew J.
    Thornton, Philip K.
    Campbell, Bruce M.
    Eriyagama, Nishadi
    Vervoort, Joost M.
    Kinyangi, James
    Jarvis, Andy
    Laderach, Peter
    Ramirez-Villegas, Julian
    Nicklin, Kathryn J.
    Hawkins, Ed
    Smith, Daniel R.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2013, 110 (21) : 8357 - 8362