Ah, that’s interesting and the nub of a difference.
The way I see it, a ‘good’ impact function would upweight the impact of low probability downside events and, perhaps, downweight low probability upside events. Maximising the expectation of such a function would push one toward policies which more reliably produce good outcomes.
Ah, that’s interesting and the nub of a difference.
The way I see it, a ‘good’ impact function would upweight the impact of low probability downside events and, perhaps, downweight low probability upside events. Maximising the expectation of such a function would push one toward policies which more reliably produce good outcomes.