Discounting Compensation for Injuries
Colin Price
Risk Analysis, 2000, vol. 20, issue 6, 839-850
Abstract:
The reasons commonly given for discounting future costs and benefits are doubtfully applicable to future injuries: in particular, time preference justifies neither inter‐ nor intragenerational discounting. The cost of future injuries could be discounted on grounds that a smaller sum, invested at interest, is needed to pay a given level of ex post monetary compensation the further in the future the injury occurs. This effect is offset, however, by the diminishing marginal utility of compensation, if consumption is otherwise increasing. Depending on the elasticity of marginal utility of consumption, on whether consumption is growing at an optimal rate, and on the time period considered, the implicit discount rate may be positive, zero, or negative (even indefinitely so). There is no prospect of conventional discounting dealing appropriately with the cost of injuries to either future or present generations.
Date: 2000
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https://doi.org/10.1111/0272-4332.206077
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wly:riskan:v:20:y:2000:i:6:p:839-850
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