The current debate over cost-benefit concerns in agencies\u27 evaluations of government regulations is not so much whether to consider costs and benefits at all but rather what belongs in the estimated costs and benefits. Overlaid is the long-standing belief that the distribution of costs and benefits needs some consideration in policy evaluations. In a recent article in the University of Chicago Law Review, Robert Frank and Cass Sunstein proposed a relatively simple method for adding distributional concerns to policy evaluation that enlarges the typically constructed estimates of the individual\u27s willingness to pay for safer jobs or safer products. One might pay more for safety if it were the result of a government regulation that manda...
Once again, I appreciate Professor Viscusi responding to my essay. I believe he has a decent grasp o...
The lecture was delivered by Richard L. Revesz on 20 June 2012.Over the last thirty years a three-st...
The fundamental rule of benefit-cost analysis is that if taxes are non-distortionary, then a necessa...
The current debate over cost-benefit concerns in agencies\u27 evaluations of government regulations ...
The current debate over cost-benefit concerns in agencies\u27 evaluations of government regulations ...
Current estimates of regulatory benefits are too low, and likely far too low, because they ignore a ...
A central question in law and economics is whether non-tax legal rules should be designed solely to ...
Before issuing major environmental, health, and safety regulations, administrative agencies are requ...
In 1989, Cass Sunstein published an article entitled On the Costs and Benefits of Aggressive Judicia...
This paper analyzes cost-benefit analysis from legal, economic, and philosophical perspectives. The ...
Why do some regulations deliver greater value to society than others? We can start to answer this im...
The paper constructs an asymmetric information model to investigate the efficiency and equity cases ...
Benefit-cost analysis is required for many regulatory decisions in the United States and in other co...
Before promulgating a major environmental, health, or safety regulation, U.S. government agencies ar...
Benefit-cost analysis (BCA) is often viewed as measuring the efficiency of a policy independent of t...
Once again, I appreciate Professor Viscusi responding to my essay. I believe he has a decent grasp o...
The lecture was delivered by Richard L. Revesz on 20 June 2012.Over the last thirty years a three-st...
The fundamental rule of benefit-cost analysis is that if taxes are non-distortionary, then a necessa...
The current debate over cost-benefit concerns in agencies\u27 evaluations of government regulations ...
The current debate over cost-benefit concerns in agencies\u27 evaluations of government regulations ...
Current estimates of regulatory benefits are too low, and likely far too low, because they ignore a ...
A central question in law and economics is whether non-tax legal rules should be designed solely to ...
Before issuing major environmental, health, and safety regulations, administrative agencies are requ...
In 1989, Cass Sunstein published an article entitled On the Costs and Benefits of Aggressive Judicia...
This paper analyzes cost-benefit analysis from legal, economic, and philosophical perspectives. The ...
Why do some regulations deliver greater value to society than others? We can start to answer this im...
The paper constructs an asymmetric information model to investigate the efficiency and equity cases ...
Benefit-cost analysis is required for many regulatory decisions in the United States and in other co...
Before promulgating a major environmental, health, or safety regulation, U.S. government agencies ar...
Benefit-cost analysis (BCA) is often viewed as measuring the efficiency of a policy independent of t...
Once again, I appreciate Professor Viscusi responding to my essay. I believe he has a decent grasp o...
The lecture was delivered by Richard L. Revesz on 20 June 2012.Over the last thirty years a three-st...
The fundamental rule of benefit-cost analysis is that if taxes are non-distortionary, then a necessa...