ABSTRACT

Putting a price tag on the environment is controversial. This book discusses ethical and political aspects of environmental cost-benefit analysis: why controversies must be expected, why they should be taken seriously, and how they can be handled in practice.

Cost-benefit analysis is commonly thought of as a method for ranking projects according to their contributions to social welfare. The starting point of the present book is different. Rather than providing a final ranking, the purpose of a project analysis is to enable participants in a democratic decision-making process to make their own well-founded rankings of projects, according to their own normative views. Since ethical and political views differ, the analysis should be useful as factual background for any reasonable social welfare judgement. This purpose faces the analyst with quite different challenges than the purpose of ranking projects.

The argument of the book is based on economic theory, but with a strong emphasis on readability and applicability. It is aimed at those – economists and non-economists alike – who use or are faced with cost-benefit analysis and environmental valuation in their work: politicians, employees of ministries and regulatory agencies, students, journalists, consultants and researchers. No particular prior knowledge of economics is required.

part |1 pages

Part I: Basics

chapter 1|5 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|6 pages

The purpose of a project analysis

chapter 3|5 pages

Types of analysis

chapter 4|7 pages

Efficiency

part |1 pages

PART II Measurement of utility and welfare

chapter 5|9 pages

Utility

chapter 6|8 pages

Social welfare

chapter 7|7 pages

Equal welfare weights

chapter 8|3 pages

Benefits measured in environmental units

chapter 9|5 pages

Disagreement

chapter 10|7 pages

Willingness to pay for the social good

chapter 11|2 pages

The main message so far

part |1 pages

Part III: CBA and democratic decision-making

chapter 12|5 pages

Democratic decision- making

chapter 13|11 pages

Sufficient background information

chapter 14|4 pages

Indicators

chapter 15|5 pages

Politicians’ attitudes to CBA

part |1 pages

Part IV: Recommendations

chapter 16|12 pages

What to do?

chapter 17|2 pages

Concluding remarks