Publications by Author: Zeckhauser, Richard

2021
Ramelli, Stefano, Alexander Wagner, Alexandre Ziegler, and Richard Zeckhauser. “Investor Rewards to Climate Responsibility: Stock-Price Responses to the Opposite Shocks of the 2016 and 2020 U.S. Elections.” Harvard Environmental Economics Program, 2021.Abstract
Donald Trump’s 2016 election and his nomination of climate skeptic Scott Pruitt to head the Environmental Protection Agency drastically downshifted expectations on U.S. policy toward climate change. Joseph Biden’s 2020 election shifted them dramatically upward. We study firms’ stock-price movements in reaction. As expected, the 2016 election boosted carbon-intensive firms. Surprisingly, firms with climate-responsible strategies also gained, especially those firms held by long-run investors. Such investors appear to have bet on a ‘‘boomerang’’ in climate policy. Harbingers of a boomerang already appeared during Trump’s term. The 2020 election marked its arrival. (JEL G14, G38, G41)
dp_91_ramelli_et_al.pdf
2016
Chen, Cuicui, and Richard Zeckhauser. “Collective Action in an Asymmetric World.” Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: Harvard Environmental Economics Program, 2016.Abstract

A central authority possessing tax and expenditure responsibilities can readily provide an efficient level of a public good. Absent a central authority, the case with climate change mitigation, voluntary arrangements must replace coercive arrangements; significant under-provision must be expected. Potential contributors have strong incentives to free ride, or to ride cheaply. International public goods are particularly challenging. The players - the nations of the world - are many and they start in quite different circumstances. Voluntary arrangements that might emerge from negotiations fall short for two reasons: First, players frame negotiations from their own standpoint, making stalemate likely. Second, the focal-point solution where contributions are proportional to benefits clashes with the disproportionate incentives little players have to ride cheaply. We identify a solution, the Cheap- Riding Efficient Equilibrium, which defines the relative contributions of players of differing size (or preference intensity) to reflect cheap riding incentives, yet still achieves Pareto optimality. Players start by establishing the Alliance/Nash Equilibrium as a base point. From that point they apply either the principles of the Lindahl Equilibrium or the Nash Bargaining Solution to proceed to the Pareto frontier. The former benefits from its focal-point properties; the latter is a standard analytic tool addressing bargaining. We apply our theory to climate change by first examining the Nordhaus Climate Club proposal. We then test the Alliance Equilibrium model using individual nations' Intended Nationally Determined Contributions pledged at the Paris Climate Change Conference. As hypothesized, larger nations made much larger pledges in proportion to their Gross National Incomes.

dp68_chen-zeckhauser.pdf
2009
Zeckhauser, Richard, and Cass R Sunstein. “Dreadful Possibilities, Neglected Probabilities.” Cambridge, Massachusetts, {USA}: Harvard Environmental Economics Program, 2009. dp3_zeckhauser-sunstein.pdf
Zeckhauser, Richard, and Cass R Sunstein. “Overreaction to Fearsome Risks.” Cambridge, Massachusetts, {USA}: Harvard Environmental Economics Program, 2009. dp2_zeckhauser-sunstein.pdf
Zeckhauser, Richard, Carolyn Kousky, and John Pratt. “Virgin Versus Experienced Risks.” Cambridge, Massachusetts, {USA}: Harvard Environmental Economics Program, 2009. dp4_zeckhauser-kousky-pratt.pdf