Discounting


Economists typically use a discounting function to decrease the importance of costs or benefits occurring further in the future. The most common functional form used for discounting is the exponential one. It is, however, heavily debated which discount rate to apply in that model, with most people arguing a rate somewhere between 0 and 10% being correct. Behavioural research shows that most individuals do not apply an exponential model to their own decisions, so other approaches may be appropriate.
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Economists typically use a discounting function to decrease the importance of costs or benefits occurring further in the future. The most common functional form used for discounting is the exponential one. It is, however, heavily debated which discount rate to apply in that model, with most people arguing a rate somewhere between 0 and 10% being correct. Behavioural research shows that most individuals do not apply an exponential model to their own decisions, but rather a hyperbolic model, in which the difference in value between an event occurring now and occurring one year in the future is much greater than the difference in value between an event occurring one year in the future and occurring two years in the future

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Valuation


This section is based on the UNEP PROVIA guidance document


Criteria checklist

1. You want to assess vulnerability.
2. Your focus is on impacts.
3. Monetary values are important.
4. Either (i) the focus is on public decisions, and either (a) indirect outcomes are important and macro-economic modelling has been addressed, or (b) market pricing has been addressed, or (ii) the focus is on private decisions.
5. Outcomes are intertemporal.