Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Half title
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The basic cost–benefit (C–B) model
- 2.1 A quick refresher course in micro
- 2.2 Simple general equilibrium C–B rules
- 2.3 Some further results
- 2.4 Public goods and bads
- 2.5 Non-use values
- 2.6 Cross-border externalities
- 2.7 Appendix: further derivations
- 3 Market distortions
- 3.1 Monopoly
- 3.2 Monopsony
- 3.3 Taxes in general equilibrium
- 3.4 The marginal cost of public funds and the excess burden of taxes
- 3.5 Second-best evaluations and optimal taxes
- 3.6 Permit markets
- 3.7 Market imbalances
- 3.7.1 Classical unemployment
- 3.7.2 Keynesian unemployment
- 3.7.3 On the (tiny) empirical evidence
- 3.7.4 Excess demand in a market
- 3.8 Appendix
- 3.8.1 Impact of price changes
- 3.8.2 Labor market constraints
- 4 Intertemporal generalization
- 4.1 Net present values, internal rates of return, and benefit–cost ratios
- 4.2 A brief introduction to optimal control theory
- 4.3 A simple dynamic cost–benefit rule
- 4.4 Social discount rate
- 4.5 On opportunity cost and shadow prices of capital
- 4.6 Timing of an investment
- 4.7 A useful discrete-time model
- 4.8 Appendix: the Inada–Uzawa condition
- 5 Natural resources
- 5.1 Nonrenewable resources
- 5.2 Renewable resources
- 5.3 Forestry
- 5.4 A dynamic CBA rule in the presence of an externality
- 5.5 On second-best solutions
- 6 Small versus large projects
- 6.1 Taylor series approximations
- 6.2 On Marshallian and Hicksian measures of consumer surplus
- 6.3 Large projects and line integrals
- 6.4 A simple illustration of the approach
- 6.5 On the properties of income-compensated measures
- 6.6 On the dangers of benefit transfers
- 6.7 Small might be large
- 6.8 Megaprojects and CGE models
- 6.9 Appendix
- 6.9.1 Line integrals
- 6.9.2 Expenditure functions
- 7 Aggregation
- 7.1 Social welfare functions
- 7.2 A few aggregation rules
- 7.3 Taxation
- 7.4 On practical approaches
- 7.5 On the approach to distribution in three major manuals
- 7.6 Appendix: measurability and comparability of utility
- 8 Appraisal in a risky world
- 8.1 Some simple rules
- 8.2 On the value of flexibility
- 8.3 A simple illustration of the Black–Scholes model
- 8.4 A stochastic cost–benefit rule
- 8.5 The value of preventing a fatality
- 8.6 On the risk of doomsday in CBA
- 8.7 Evaluating disasters. A sketch
- 8.8 Appendix
- 8.8.1 Concavity and quasi-concavity
- 8.8.2 A discrete-time random walk with drift
- 8.8.3 L’Hôpital’s rule
- 8.8.4 An illustration of a VPF function
- 9 Notes on estimation techniques
- 9.1 Contingent valuation
- 9.2 Conjoint analysis and discrete choice experiments
- 9.3 The travel-cost model
- 9.4 Hedonic models
- 9.5 Weak complementarity and household production functions
- 9.6 Benefit transfer
- 9.7 Heterogeneity and aggregation
- 9.8 Cost estimation
- 9.9 Appendix: weak complementarity
- 10 A smörgåsbord of further topics
- 10.1 On the empirical discount rate evidence
- 10.2 Wider economic benefits
- 10.3 The current approach versus Drèze–Stern
- 10.4 On behavioral and happiness economics and CBA
- 10.5 CEA/CUA, multi-criteria analysis, and economic impact analysis
- 11 Robustness checks and due diligence in evaluations
- 11.1 Deterministic sensitivity analysis
- 11.2 Risk analysis
- 11.3 Due diligence and evaluations
- References
- Index




