Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Pricing the Priceless: Cost-Benefit Analysis of Environmental Protection

2002; University of Pennsylvania Law School; Volume: 150; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/3312947

ISSN

1942-8537

Autores

Frank Ackerman, Lisa Heinzerling,

Tópico(s)

Climate Change Policy and Economics

Resumo

Many analytical approaches to setting environmental standards require some consideration of costs and benefits.Even technologybased regulation, maligned by cost-benefit enthusiasts as the worst form of regulatory excess, typically entails consideration of economic costs.Cost-benefit analysis differs, however, from other analytical approaches in the following respect: it demands that the advantages and disadvantages of a regulatory policy be reduced, as far as possible, to numbers, and then further reduced to dollars and cents.In this feature of cost-benefit analysis lies its doom.Indeed, looking closely at the products of this pricing scheme makes it seem not only a little cold, but a little crazy as well.Consider the following examples, which we are not making up.They are not the work of a lunatic fringe, but, on the contrary, they reflect the work products of some of the most influential and reputable of today's cost-benefit practitioners.We are not sure whether to laugh or cry; we find it impossible to treat these studies as serious contributions to a rational discussion.Several years ago, states were in the middle of their litigation against tobacco companies, seeking to recoup the medical expenditures they had incurred as a result of smoking.At that time, W. Kip Viscusi-a professor of law and economics at Harvard and the primary source of the current $6.3 million estimate for the value of a statistical life'-undertook research concluding that states, in fact, saved money

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