Climate change and global warming are critical developments and are inevitably shaping the global economy and society. Population health, agricultural value added, infrastructure, productivity -to mention just few spheres -are all affected by climatic conditions, albeit to a varying extent. The agenda of academic and international policy debate is dominated by two fundamental questions. First, what are the long-term consequences of global warming on the economy and society? Second, how could the economy and society adapt to global warming in the least disruptive way?In terms of the first question, there is a widespread belief that climate change poses major challenges and risks to global economic activity. Specifically, our empirical exercise shows that positive temperature shocks lead to a reduction in the growth rate of business R&D expenditure, which ranges from 0.6 to 0.84 percentage points in the G7 countries. We subsequently develop a general equilibrium model that accounts for this empirical finding. Particularly, we assume that temperature shocks have a negative influence on the accumulation of patents. Therefore, climate change has disruptive effects on economic activity by increasing the patent obsolescence rate, which in turn places a constraint on the growth rate of the economy. We further show that temperature shocks are associated with declining welfare. Under a plausible scenario, a positive temperature shock manifests in an 11% decrease of welfare in the long run.This study also delves into the second question that is concerned about the optimal economic policy response. Our results indicate that governments need to spend 22.2% of their budgets as capital investment subsidy in order to fully compensate for the welfare costs caused by global temperature risk. The benchmark case scenario is then extended to cater to a broad range of different eventualities and to vindicate our qualitative research findings. How such government spending ought to be structured is left for future research. Taken together, our findings indicate that governments need to incorporate the stylized temperature change, output, and welfare nexus into the governments' objective function and that governments should fight the adverse consequences of global warming rather aggressively.Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3075229Global Temperature, R&D Expenditure, and Growth Michael Donadelli * Patrick Grüning ** Marcus Jüppner *** Renatas Kizys **** This version: November 15, 2017
AbstractWe shed new light on the macroeconomic effects of rising temperatures. In the data, a shock to global temperature dampens expenditures in research and development (R&D). We rationalize this empirical evidence within a stochastic endogenous growth model, featuring temperature risk and growth sustained through innovations. In line with the novel evidence in the data, temperature shocks undermine economic growth via a drop in R&D. Moreover, in our endogenous growth setting temperature risk generates non-negligible welfare costs ...