Effects of fairness principles on willingness to pay for climate change mitigation

被引:0
|
作者
Brilé Anderson
Thomas Bernauer
Stefano Balietti
机构
[1] ETH Zürich,Center for Comparative and International Studies (CIS)
[2] Northeastern University,Network Science Institute
[3] Harvard Institute for Quantitative Social Science,undefined
[4] D’Amore-McKim School of Business,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 2017年 / 142卷
关键词
Climate Policy; Ultimatum Game; Historical Responsibility; Mitigation Cost; Burden Sharing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Despite the shift from multilateral negotiations on legally binding mitigation commitments to the decentralized nonbinding Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) approach in global climate policy, governments and other stakeholders continue to insist that fairness principles guide the overall effort. Key recurring principles in this debate are capacity and historical responsibility. To keep global warming within the internationally agreed 2 °C limit, many countries will have to engage in more ambitious climate policies relative to current INDCs. Public support will be crucial in this respect. We thus explore the implications of different fairness principles for citizens’ preferences concerning burden sharing in climate policy. To this end, we implemented an online experiment in which participants (N = 414) played an ultimatum game. Participants were tasked with sharing the costs of climate change mitigation. The aim was to examine how participants’ willingness to pay for mitigation was influenced by capacity and historical responsibility considerations. The results show that fairness principles do have a strong effect and that participants applied fairness principles differently depending on their position at the outset. It turns out that participants paid more attention to other players’ capacity and historical responsibility when proposing a particular cost allocation and more attention to their own capacity and responsibility when responding to proposals by others. These and other findings suggest that framing climate policy in terms of internationally coordinated unilateral measures is likely to garner more public support than framing climate policy in terms of a global bargaining effort over the mitigation burden.
引用
收藏
页码:447 / 461
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Analysing the socioeconomic and motivational factors affecting the willingness to pay for climate change adaptation in Malaysia
    Al-Amin, Abul Quasem
    Masud, Muhammad Mehedi
    Sarkar, Md Sujahangir Kabir
    Leal Filho, Walter
    Doberstein, Brent
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION, 2020, 50
  • [32] Estimating farmers’ willingness to pay for climate change adaptation: the case of the Malaysian agricultural sector
    Muhammad Mehedi Masud
    Ha Junsheng
    Rulia Akhtar
    Abul Quasem Al-Amin
    Fatimah Binti Kari
    Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2015, 187
  • [33] Examining the effects of climate change perception and commuting experience on the willingness to pay for micro-transit service in Tampa, FL
    Zhai, Wei
    Gao, Shuqi
    Liu, Mengyang
    Wei, Di
    HUMANITIES & SOCIAL SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS, 2023, 10 (01):
  • [34] Examining the effects of climate change perception and commuting experience on the willingness to pay for micro-transit service in Tampa, FL
    Wei Zhai
    Shuqi Gao
    Mengyang Liu
    Di Wei
    Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 10
  • [35] Energy system change and external effects in climate change mitigation
    Anderson, Dennis
    Winne, Sarah
    ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2007, 12 : 359 - 378
  • [36] Perceptions on Climate Change Correlate with Willingness to Undertake Some Forestry Adaptation and Mitigation Practices
    Lenart, Melanie
    Jones, Christopher
    JOURNAL OF FORESTRY, 2014, 112 (06) : 553 - 563
  • [37] Climate change 2007: Mitigation of climate change
    Wener, Richard E.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 29 (04) : 533 - 535
  • [38] Fairness in Adaptation to Climate Change
    Hill, Antonio
    DEVELOPMENT IN PRACTICE, 2008, 18 (01) : 141 - 143
  • [39] Fairness in adaptation to climate change
    Stoett, Peter
    INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2007, 83 (04) : 801 - 802