Valuation of natural capital under uncertain substitutability

Abstract

Natural capital is complex to value notably because of the high uncertainties surrounding the substitutability of its future ecosystem services. We examine a Lucas economy in which a consumption good is produced by combining different inputs, one of them being an ecosystem service that is partially substitutable with other inputs. The growth rate of these inputs and the elasticity of substitution evolve in a stochastic way. We characterize the socially efficient ecological discount rates that should be used to value future ecosystem services at different time horizons. We show that the inverse of the elasticity of substitution can be interpreted as the CCAPM beta of natural capital. We also show that any increase in risk of this beta reduces the ecological discount rate. If our collective beliefs about the elasticity of substitution of ecosystem services are Gaussian, the ecological discount rates go to minus infinity for finite maturities. In that case, a marginal increase in natural capital has an infinite value. We provide a realistic calibration of the model that is coherent with observed asset prices by using the model of extreme events of Barro (2006). The bliss maturity for infinite discount factors is less than 100 years in this calibration.

Keywords

Relative price effect
CCAPM beta
Ecological discounting
Bioeconomics

JEL classification

G12
Q01
1

An initial version of this paper was entitled “A theory of rational short-termism with uncertain betas”. I am indebted to Jaroslav Borovicka, John Campbell, Pierre Fery, Stéphane Gallon, Jim Hammitt, Elyès Jouini, Richard Peter, Peter Schotman and Marty Weitzman for useful comments on earlier versions of this paper, together with seminar participant at the International Pension Workshop (Netspar, Amsterdam), at Dauphine University (Paris) and at the University of Munich. Julien Sauvagnat has been an excellent research assistant for this paper. The research leading to these results has received funding from the Chairs “Risk Markets and Value Creation” and “Sustainable Finance and Responsible Investments” at TSE.

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