Book Details
New Foundations of Cost-Benefit Analysis
In this book, the authors reconceptualize cost-benefit analysis, arguing that its objective should be overall well-being rather than economic efficiency. They show why the link between preferences and well-being is more complicated than economists have thought. Satisfying a person's preference for some outcome is welfare-enhancing only if he or she is self-interested and well-informed. Also, cost-benefit analysis is not a super-procedure but simply a way to identify welfare-maximizing policies. A separate kind of analysis is required to weigh rights and equal treatment.
This book not only places cost-benefit analysis on a firmer theoretical foundation, but also has many practical implications for how government agencies should undertake cost-benefit studies.
Introduction
1 The Traditional View
2 The Moral Foundations of Cost-Benefit Analysis
3 Cost-Benefit Analysis as a Decision Procedure
4 Political Oversight
5 Distorted Preferences
6 Objections
Conclusion
Notes
Index
Cost Proxy Models and Telecommunications Policy : A New Empirical Approach to Regulation
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