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Cost-Benefit Analysis

E.J. Mishan, +1 more
TLDR
Costbenefit analysis (CBA) is the systematic and analytical process of comparing benefits and costs in evaluating the desirability of a project or program as mentioned in this paper, often of a social nature, and is fundamental to government decision making and is established as a formal technique for making informed decisions on the use of society's scarce resources.
Abstract
Cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is the systematic and analytical process of comparing benefits and costs in evaluating the desirability of a project or programme – often of a social nature. It attempts to answer such questions as whether a proposed project is worthwhile, the optimal scale of a proposed project and the relevant constraints. CBA is fundamental to government decision making and is established as a formal technique for making informed decisions on the use of society’s scarce resources. This timely sixth edition of the classic Cost-Benefit Analysis text continues to build on the successful approach of previous editions, with lucid explanation of key ideas, simple but effective expository short chapters and an appendix on various useful statistical and mathematical concepts and derivatives. The book examines important developments in the discipline, with relevant examples and illustrations as well as new and expanded chapters which build upon standard materials on CBA. Highlights include: updated historical background of CBA extended non-market goods valuation methods the impact of uncertainty evaluation of programmes and services behavioural economics decision rules and heuristics CBA and regulatory reforms CBA in developed and developing countries value of household production other topics frequently encountered in CBA, such as costs of diseases and air pollution, and value of statistical life. This book is a valuable source and guide to international funding agencies, governments, interested professional economists and senior undergraduate and graduate students. The text is fully supported by a companion website, which includes discussion questions and PowerPoint slides for each chapter.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Groundwater contamination from waste management sites: The interaction between risk‐based engineering design and regulatory policy: 1. Methodology

TL;DR: The risk-costbenefit analysis developed in the companion paper (J. Massmann and R. A. Freeze, this issue) is here applied to an assessment of the relative worth of containment-construction activities, site-exploration activities, and monitoring activities as components of a design strategy for the owner/operator of a waste management facility as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stated preference in the valuation of interurban road safety.

TL;DR: The results of the stated preference experiment show that people were sensitive to the risk variable, thus "stating" a preference for safer routes, and the derived values were able to estimate subjective values of time consistent with previous values obtained in the country and reasonably looking values of a statistical life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic analysis in randomized control trials.

TL;DR: It was found that only 121 of over 50,000 published randomized trials (0.2%) included economic analyses in RCTs published from January 1966 through June 1988, and a near-zero correlation between the economic completeness and the quality of research scores was revealed.

Theory and Practice in the Choice of Social Discount Rate for Cost-benefit Analysis: A Survey

TL;DR: The choice of an appropriate social discount rate for cost-benefit analysis of public projects has long been a contentious issue and subject to intense debate among economists as mentioned in this paper, which has gained new impetus from recent discussions on the economics of climate change.
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