Ressource pédagogique : Climate, Geography and Macroeconomics: Revised Data, Refined Analysis and New Findings

cours / présentation - Date de création : 07-11-2008
Auteur(s) : Hans-Martin FÜSSEL
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Présentation de: Climate, Geography and Macroeconomics: Revised Data, Refined Analysis and New Findings

Informations pratiques sur cette ressource

Langue du document : Anglais
Type pédagogique : cours / présentation
Niveau : doctorat
Durée d'exécution : 15 minutes
Contenu : image en mouvement
Document : video/mp4
Droits d'auteur : libre de droits, gratuit
Droits réservés à l'éditeur et aux auteurs. Tous droits réservés.

Description de la ressource pédagogique

Description (résumé)

Assessments of social and economic impacts of climate change are primarily based on the results of biophysical climate impact models, which are aggregated, extrapolated and/or valued in monetary terms. Another potential source of information on climate impacts are spatial and/or temporal analogues, such as Ricardian analysis of climate impacts on agriculture. Another recent effort to this end involves the development of the G-Econ database (Nordhaus, 2006), which describes the relationship between climatic and geographic factors on the one hand and regional economic productivity on the other. A multivariate regression derived from this database has been used to estimate global economic impacts of climate change in a recent version of the DICE model. The reanalysis presented here was motivated by some counterintuitive results in Nordhaus (2006). I have developed a modified version of the GEcon database, which corrects several inconsistencies in G-Econ, and which is available at two different spatial resolutions (grid cells and subnational administrative units). This database is applied to reanalyze key results in Nordhaus (2006) and to perform additional analyses, focussing on the influence of climate on population density, density of economic output, and output per capita. I discuss the implications of several statistical problems in the G-Econ data (skewness, heteroskedasticity, excess zeros, different weights of data points, different spatial resolutions of predictors and predictands) for statistical analysis and assess the sensitivity of results to variations in statistical estimators, aggregation units, and weighting schemes. This reanalysis finds that the counterintuitive results in Nordhaus (2006) can be largely explained by flawed methods for data aggregation and analysis, and by incomplete data in the G-Econ database. Given that several statistical problems have been inadequately addressed by Nordhaus (2006), the validity of estimates of global climate impacts based on G-Econ remains doubtful.

"Domaine(s)" et indice(s) Dewey

  • Économie (330)
  • Sciences de la Terre (550)

Thème(s)

Intervenants, édition et diffusion

Intervenants

Fournisseur(s) de contenus : Richard FILLON, Jirasri DESLIS

Éditeur(s)

Diffusion

Document(s) annexe(s) - Climate, Geography and Macroeconomics: Revised Data, Refined Analysis and New Findings

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AUTEUR(S)

  • Hans-Martin FÜSSEL

ÉDITION

FMSH-ESCoM

EN SAVOIR PLUS

  • Identifiant de la fiche
    30563
  • Identifiant
    oai:canal-u.fr:30563
  • Schéma de la métadonnée
  • Entrepôt d'origine
    Canal-U
  • Date de publication
    07-11-2008