Abstract

Climate justice is conceived as the intertemporal climate equity and equality exchange amongst generations. Sustainability—intended as the interplay amongst the economy, the society, the environment, and the governance—is essential to forge the climate justice theoretical framework. On this base, the study attempts to model the intertemporal choice of the status quo amongst generations in these four domains, making use of an overlapping generations (OLG) model making use of an intertemporal choice framework. The proxies detected are GDP growth (economy), environmental quality (environment), and labor growth, and environmental investment (society) as assumptions. The governance dimension is captured by the difference in wealth between young and old generations. The work aims at replying to the following research question: Which are the conditions for sustainable development such that climate justice holds? The intra-intergenerational exchange is defined in two periods, while the individual provides their preferred economic and environmental choice mix as consumption-saving. This study shows that keeping the business-as-usual scenario, young generations will have to bear the brunt of sustainable development. Additionally, reduced emissions are only achievable with increased efforts by the youth by reducing their leisure and consumption. These facts call for enhanced intergenerational sustainability and climate justice policies.

Highlights

  • Climate justice is nowadays an ecological and societal conundrum having major implications on public health (Introcaso 2018)

  • The study attempts to contribute to the existing theoretical literature on climate justice, offering a model to theorize the intertemporal choice amongst generations in these four domains

  • In order to verify the impact of the shock on the climate justice variables, we provide a comparison of our model with the classical Diamond model in the case of σ = 1

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Summary

Introduction

Climate justice is nowadays an ecological and societal conundrum having major implications on public health (Introcaso 2018). 17 goals and 169 targets to tackle poverty and achieve sustainable development in OECD and least developed countries (United Nations (UN) 2015) In this framework, the need for promoting climate resilience policies to face climate change vulnerability issues plays a crucial role (Brenkert and Malone 2005). This work assumes climate justice coming from the intergenerational climate equity and equality, being deliverable solely through an ethical, sustainable approach (Stern and Taylor 2007; Francis 2015; McKinnon 2015; UNESCO 2014) In this regard, sustainability requires the simultaneous combination of a balanced economic, social, environmental, and governance mix. Sustainability requires the simultaneous combination of a balanced economic, social, environmental, and governance mix Holding these conceptual premises, the study attempts to contribute to the existing theoretical literature on climate justice, offering a model to theorize the intertemporal choice amongst generations in these four domains.

The Model
Consumers
Competitive Equilibrium
Calibration
Steady-State
Impulse Response Analysis
Impulse
Conclusions and Policy Implications
Full Text
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