Abstract

Confusion between the ethical norm of intergenerational equity and the practical technique of discounting only obscures the basic issues of efficiency and equity. The author distinguishes between the discounting approach and the equity argument, and explains their essentially complementary roles in long-term investment decisions. He argues that the discounting method is an important tool in the achievement of intergenerational equity since it can determine the amount of compensation to be paid to future generations, a sum which by definition will compensate them for the damage our action has caused.

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