The Article responds to the school of thought reflected in the book Priceless: On Knowing the Price of Everything and the Value of Nothing that opposes the economists\u27 attempts to monetize the value of environmental amenities and the value of risks to life and health. It applies the value of statistical life ( VSL ) concept to regulatory decisions in order to decide whether the adoption of a regulation makes economic sense. VSL measures the value of life, as judged by measuring the amount of risk of injury workers in a particular industry are willing to take on, and the costs associated with the regulation, in order to find whether the benefits are greater than the costs. It concludes that general surveys have shown people can rational...
Benefit-cost analysis can play a very important role in legislative and regulatory policy debates on...
James Broughel’s essay, “Rethinking the Value of a Statistical Life,” does not rethink the valuation...
As the Obama Administration seeks to reduce the regulatory burden on businesses (see related essay o...
The Article responds to the school of thought reflected in the book Priceless: On Knowing the Price...
The Article is in response to Professor Kip Viscusi\u27s Monetizing the Benefits of Risk and Enviro...
Regulatory agencies often must make life-or-death decisions. In the process, those decisions can als...
Legal scholarship on the role of cost-benefit analysis in environmental law is often stimulating, bu...
In protecting safety, health, and the environment, government has increasingly relied on cost-benefi...
In this Article, however, we do not mount a critique from outside the technique of cost-benefit anal...
The entire U.S. federal regulatory apparatus, especially that part devoted to reducing (or deciding ...
Should the benefits of risk and environmental regulations be monetized? For economists, this questi...
There is an elaborate debate over the practice of discounting regulatory benefits, such as environ...
This review-essay explores the uses and limits of cost-benefit analysis in the context of environmen...
There is an elaborate debate over the practice of discounting regulatory benefits, such as environ...
Will unbearable regulatory costs ruin the US economy? This specter haunts official Washington, just ...
Benefit-cost analysis can play a very important role in legislative and regulatory policy debates on...
James Broughel’s essay, “Rethinking the Value of a Statistical Life,” does not rethink the valuation...
As the Obama Administration seeks to reduce the regulatory burden on businesses (see related essay o...
The Article responds to the school of thought reflected in the book Priceless: On Knowing the Price...
The Article is in response to Professor Kip Viscusi\u27s Monetizing the Benefits of Risk and Enviro...
Regulatory agencies often must make life-or-death decisions. In the process, those decisions can als...
Legal scholarship on the role of cost-benefit analysis in environmental law is often stimulating, bu...
In protecting safety, health, and the environment, government has increasingly relied on cost-benefi...
In this Article, however, we do not mount a critique from outside the technique of cost-benefit anal...
The entire U.S. federal regulatory apparatus, especially that part devoted to reducing (or deciding ...
Should the benefits of risk and environmental regulations be monetized? For economists, this questi...
There is an elaborate debate over the practice of discounting regulatory benefits, such as environ...
This review-essay explores the uses and limits of cost-benefit analysis in the context of environmen...
There is an elaborate debate over the practice of discounting regulatory benefits, such as environ...
Will unbearable regulatory costs ruin the US economy? This specter haunts official Washington, just ...
Benefit-cost analysis can play a very important role in legislative and regulatory policy debates on...
James Broughel’s essay, “Rethinking the Value of a Statistical Life,” does not rethink the valuation...
As the Obama Administration seeks to reduce the regulatory burden on businesses (see related essay o...