2014
DOI: 10.1561/102.00000047
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Optimal Commitment Under Uncertainty: Adjustment Rules for Climate Policy

Abstract: This paper analyses the optimal type and degree of commitment to a future climate policy when damage costs from climate change are uncertain. Taking uncertainty into account, it is shown within the framework of a sequential game between firms and a regulator that commitment to an emission abatement target fails to achieve the first best optimal outcome. Though commitment to a future policy reduces the risk of time-inconsistency, it imposes costs in the form of reduced flexibility to respond to new information.… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…To make this process more transparent, rules regarding when and how policies will be revised based on what new information can be enacted in advance. 121,192,193 As flexibility increases the odds that the policy will survive unexpected shocks and changes, a flexible policy is also more credible over the long term. 194 For instance, energy efficiency standards typically include flexibility: in the United States, CAFE standards are negotiated, announced far in advanced, and revised at mid-road to adjust to new information on compliance costs and benefits.…”
Section: Tackling Other Market and Government Failuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To make this process more transparent, rules regarding when and how policies will be revised based on what new information can be enacted in advance. 121,192,193 As flexibility increases the odds that the policy will survive unexpected shocks and changes, a flexible policy is also more credible over the long term. 194 For instance, energy efficiency standards typically include flexibility: in the United States, CAFE standards are negotiated, announced far in advanced, and revised at mid-road to adjust to new information on compliance costs and benefits.…”
Section: Tackling Other Market and Government Failuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…to respond to shocks). Legislating for adjustment rules rather than fixed rates (Jakob and Brunner, 2014) and signalling narrow parameters for future amendment can support a balance of policy commitment and flexibility.…”
Section: Legislationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In order to change the constitution, which explicitly protects existing assets from legal changes, usually a qualified majority is required in parliament, posing a high threshold for retrospective changes of the renewable energy policy (Jakob and Brunner, 2014). This can be the case both for feed-in tariffs and feed-in premia.…”
Section: Time-inconsistency Under Different Policy Regimesmentioning
confidence: 99%