article published in journal of economicsRisk regulations directly reduce risks, but they may produce offsetting risk increases. Regulated risks generate a substitution effect, as individuals' risk-averting actions will diminish. Recognition of these effects alters benefit-cost criteria and the value-of-life estimates pertinent to policy analysis. Particularly expensive risk regulations may be counterproductive. The expenditure level that will lead to the loss of one statistical life equals the value of life divided by the marginal propensity to spend on health. Regulations with a cost of $30 million to $70 million per life saved will, on balance, have a net adverse effect on mortality because of these linkages
article published in law journalA principal component of many benefit-cost analyses (BCAs) of health...
Economy-wide feedbacks can affect the efficiency and incidence of policy interventions, and have lon...
The Value of a Statistical Life represents how much a population values reducing the probability of ...
Many of the views that James Broughel ascribes to me are not expressed in my previous comments or in...
Over the past three decades, regulatory agencies have made tremendous progress in the valuation of m...
Regulatory agencies often must make life-or-death decisions. In the process, those decisions can als...
article published in law reviewThe value of a statistical life (VSL) is the most influential single ...
Is death a harm? Is the risk of death a harm? These questions lie at the foundations of risk regulat...
The value of mortality risk reductions, conventionally expressed as the value per statistical life (...
A choice model based on utility in each of a sequence of prospective future health states permits us...
International audienceEconomic valuation of health risks plays an important role in informing decisi...
It is The Regulatory Review’s fifth anniversary, and also five years since we first wrote about the ...
James Broughel’s essay, “Rethinking the Value of a Statistical Life,” does not rethink the valuation...
The 1980s marked the first decade in which use of estimates of the value of life based on risk trade...
The author studies three aspects of human live valuation and its relation with and cost benefit anal...
article published in law journalA principal component of many benefit-cost analyses (BCAs) of health...
Economy-wide feedbacks can affect the efficiency and incidence of policy interventions, and have lon...
The Value of a Statistical Life represents how much a population values reducing the probability of ...
Many of the views that James Broughel ascribes to me are not expressed in my previous comments or in...
Over the past three decades, regulatory agencies have made tremendous progress in the valuation of m...
Regulatory agencies often must make life-or-death decisions. In the process, those decisions can als...
article published in law reviewThe value of a statistical life (VSL) is the most influential single ...
Is death a harm? Is the risk of death a harm? These questions lie at the foundations of risk regulat...
The value of mortality risk reductions, conventionally expressed as the value per statistical life (...
A choice model based on utility in each of a sequence of prospective future health states permits us...
International audienceEconomic valuation of health risks plays an important role in informing decisi...
It is The Regulatory Review’s fifth anniversary, and also five years since we first wrote about the ...
James Broughel’s essay, “Rethinking the Value of a Statistical Life,” does not rethink the valuation...
The 1980s marked the first decade in which use of estimates of the value of life based on risk trade...
The author studies three aspects of human live valuation and its relation with and cost benefit anal...
article published in law journalA principal component of many benefit-cost analyses (BCAs) of health...
Economy-wide feedbacks can affect the efficiency and incidence of policy interventions, and have lon...
The Value of a Statistical Life represents how much a population values reducing the probability of ...