Stephen Hatfield Dodds

Steve Hatfield Dodds (born Stephen Dodds) is an Australian philosophical economist, with notable work in the social cost of economic decision-making and particularly sustainable development and the economic impact of climate change.

Contents

Education

In 2000, Hatfield Dodds gained his PhD in Economics from the Australian National University in Canberra, after submitting a thesis, From consumerism to sustainable development: essays on progress, well-being and limits in economic thought.

Work

Soon after graduating, and joining the Australian Government's Treasury, Hatfield Dodds was seconded to the Canadian Department of Finance for several years and travelled lived in Ottawa with his family.

On returning to Australia, he held positions in The Allen Consulting Group, Environment Australia, and the Australian National University.

He worked with, and advised on:

He joined Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in 2002,[1] and in 2003 became Senior Researcher in the Integration Science and Public Policy office, CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems. In 2008 he joined the newly formed Commonwealth Department of Climate Change.

In the December 2007 report Leader, follower or free rider? touted[2] as of similar importance to Sir Nicholas Stern's Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change for the Government of the United Kingdom (to which he contributed a submission), Hatfield Dodds as lead author argued for deep cuts in Australia's greenhouse gas emissions in the next 40 years (to 2050) and that the economic costs are modest and manageable and, indeed, preferable to the consequences of not acting. "It is much more disruptive and costly to step up action than to relax it so it is better to start off with the most stringent target you can imagine and that is what we have modelled... ".[2][3]

Positions held

Awards

The Bulletin magazine's 28 October 2003 edition named Hatfield Dodds in its inaugural 'Smart 100' list of leading Australian innovators.

Family

References

  1. ^ 2006 Fenner Conference, CSIRO, accessed 2007-12-3
  2. ^ a b Fighting climate change won't hinder economy: report, ABC News Online, 3 December 2007, accessed 2007-12-3
  3. ^ Economic impacts of emission reductions, CSIRO Media podcast, December 2007, accessed 2007-12-3
  4. ^ Participants by State, www.australia2020.gov.au, accessed 16 April 2008

Further reading