2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-5890.2005.00010.x
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The Elasticity of Marginal Utility of Consumption: Estimates for 20 OECD Countries*

Abstract: In social project appraisal, the policy profile of both distributional welfare weights and the social discount rate has risen considerably in recent years. This fact has important implications for the allocation of funds to social projects and policies in countries, and in unions of countries such as the EU. A key component in the formulae for both welfare weights and the social discount rate is the elasticity of marginal utility of consumption, e. A critical review of existing evidence on e suggests that the … Show more

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Cited by 124 publications
(102 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
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“…There are several methods for calculating each parameter, but most prevalent is a tax-based (mostly income tax) method for capturing the elasticity of the marginal utility of consumption (Evans 2005) and the use of GDP as growth rate.…”
Section: Stpr = P + Eg (1)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are several methods for calculating each parameter, but most prevalent is a tax-based (mostly income tax) method for capturing the elasticity of the marginal utility of consumption (Evans 2005) and the use of GDP as growth rate.…”
Section: Stpr = P + Eg (1)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We find that even if such damages occur with certainty, the difference in optimal prices across the three specifications is smaller than for varying the sub-regional distribution of mitigation cost or damage over a credible range. This is the case, as long as the inequality aversion parameter is greater than unity, on which most such studies agree (see Evans (2005) for estimates from OECD countries and Dasgupta (2008) for a theoretical overview). In fact, when the distribution of damage hurts the poor, the specifications with catastrophic damage barely affect the optimal price at all.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…tax policy are transferred to the field of intergenerational distribution. The various studies on inequality aversion as expressed by income tax progressivity in a society suggest different values for η which sometimes lie in the interval between 1 and 2 (see Evans, D. (2005)) but are lower than 1 in other studies (see Atkinson, A. and Brandolini, A. (2010)).…”
Section: Inequality Aversionmentioning
confidence: 99%