Our path of economic development has generated a growing list of
environmental problems including the disposal of nuclear waste,
exhaustion of natural resources, loss of biodiversity, climate change,
and polluted land, air, and water. All these environmental problems
raise the crucial challenge of determining what we should and should not
do for future generations. It is also central to other policy debates,
including, for example, the appropriate level of public debt, investment
in public infrastructure, investment in education, and the level of
funding for pension benefits and for research and development. Today,
the judge, the citizen, the politician, and the entrepreneur are
concerned with the sustainability of our development. The objective of
Pricing the Planet's Future is to provide a simple framework to organize
the debate on what we should do for the future.A key element of analysis
by economists is the discount rate--the minimum rate of return required
from an
investment project to make it desirable to implement. Christian Gollier
outlines the basic theory of the discount rate and the various arguments
that favor using a smaller discount rate for more distant cash
flows.With principles that can be applied to many policy areas, Pricing
the Planet's Future offers an ideal framework for dynamic problems and
decision making.