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This book shows, we believe, the breadth and the complexity of
issues that econo mists now tackle in their analysis of the
connections between the ecosystem and the economic system. The book
offers contributions to such disparate issues as the value of
preserving the wolf in Sweden and the proper distribution of
permits in an effective global warming treaty. Because these
questions remain at the fore front of important resource allocation
problems that need to be confronted, it is only appropriate that
they are represented in a book that intends to paint a picture,
albeit certainly incomplete, of the vibrant and progressing state
of environmental economics. The contributions cover five areas of
environmental economics: policy instru ments, cost-benefit
analysis, cost-efficiency, contingent valuation and experimental
economics. Each area is worthy of a book by itself, but here we
have made a point of focusing on problems that seem directly
applicable to the pressing policy issues of today. Thus, the
contributors address topics that are directly relevant to interna
tional and regional policy making, as well as those that are linked
to development of supporting information systems (e.g. resource
accounting). In addition, the con tributions seek to provide
high-level applications of measurement techniques as well as
pertinent critiques of these methods. The next section provides a
summary overview of the book."
This book presents research on a kind of water use conflicts that
is becoming more and more common and important: How to best manage
moving water in times of increasing demand for electricity as well
as environmental services. How should decisions be made between
water use for electricity generation or for environmental and
recreational benefits? The authors develop a simple general
equilibrium model of a small open economy which is used to derive a
cost-benefit rule that can be used to assess projects that divert
water from electricity generation to recreational and other uses
(or vice versa). The cost-benefit rule is then applied to the
specific case of a proposed change at a Swedish hydropower plant.
The book provides a manual for the evaluation of river regulations
which can easily be replicated in other studies.
This book presents research on a kind of water use conflicts that
is becoming more and more common and important: How to best manage
moving water in times of increasing demand for electricity as well
as environmental services. How should decisions be made between
water use for electricity generation or for environmental and
recreational benefits? The authors develop a simple general
equilibrium model of a small open economy which is used to derive a
cost-benefit rule that can be used to assess projects that divert
water from electricity generation to recreational and other uses
(or vice versa). The cost-benefit rule is then applied to the
specific case of a proposed change at a Swedish hydropower plant.
The book provides a manual for the evaluation of river regulations
which can easily be replicated in other studies.
Should more water be diverted to or from electricity generation?
This timely question is addressed in this short volume. Two
different approaches are introduced and compared: The first is a
cost-benefit analysis, examining the case of re-regulating a
Swedish hydropower plant in which water is diverted from
electricity generation to the downstream dryway. The proposed
scenario generates environmental and other benefits, but comes at a
cost in terms of lost electricity. The second study introduces an
approach very different from the one used in conventional
cost-benefit analysis, and provides a set of measures designed so
that most, if not all, affected parties will be better off. Thus,
in contrast to a conventional cost-benefit analysis, which draws on
hypothetical compensation measures, the new approach envisages
actual compensation. Comparing two different theoretical frameworks
on the basis of a real-world case, this study can be seen as a
manual that can be used to evaluate reasonably small re-regulation
of rivers.
Written by two leading experts, this is a compact guide to the key
tools and methods necessary to carry out cost-benefit analysis
(CBA). The authors use modern economic tools to obtain general
equilibrium cost-benefit rules that can be used to evaluate small
projects, as well as large and even mega projects. Intertemporal
issues like discounting, the shadow price of capital, and the
treatment of risk are covered, and a state-of-the-art summary of
available methods for the valuation of unpriced commodities is also
included. In addition, the book provides detailed expositions of
the marginal cost of public goods (MCPF), the marginal excess
burden of taxes (MEB), and second-best evaluation rules, and shows
how these concepts are interrelated. The importance of undertaking
due diligence in evaluations is highlighted. This is an excellent
toolkit for graduate students learning about the principles of CBA,
and is a useful guide for government officials and policymakers.
This book shows, we believe, the breadth and the complexity of
issues that econo mists now tackle in their analysis of the
connections between the ecosystem and the economic system. The book
offers contributions to such disparate issues as the value of
preserving the wolf in Sweden and the proper distribution of
permits in an effective global warming treaty. Because these
questions remain at the fore front of important resource allocation
problems that need to be confronted, it is only appropriate that
they are represented in a book that intends to paint a picture,
albeit certainly incomplete, of the vibrant and progressing state
of environmental economics. The contributions cover five areas of
environmental economics: policy instru ments, cost-benefit
analysis, cost-efficiency, contingent valuation and experimental
economics. Each area is worthy of a book by itself, but here we
have made a point of focusing on problems that seem directly
applicable to the pressing policy issues of today. Thus, the
contributors address topics that are directly relevant to interna
tional and regional policy making, as well as those that are linked
to development of supporting information systems (e.g. resource
accounting). In addition, the con tributions seek to provide
high-level applications of measurement techniques as well as
pertinent critiques of these methods. The next section provides a
summary overview of the book."
This Element on cost-benefit analysis provides a summary of recent
theoretical and empirical developments and summarizes
state-of-the-art stated-preference and revealed-preference
valuation methods. The Element discusses how to assess small (or
marginal) as well as large (or non-marginal) projects that have a
significant impact on prices and/or other economic variables. It
also discusses distortions like taxes, market power, and sticky
prices. In addition, risk/uncertainty is considered. A novel
feature is the elaboration on flexible evaluation rules for
reasonably small projects. Conventional point-estimates of projects
should be used with care, because they typically give biased
results.
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