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Drawing on the principles of welfare economics and public finance, this second edition of Cost-Benefit Analysis: Theory and Application provides the theoretical foundation for a general framework within which costs and benefits are identified and assessed from a societal perspective. With a thorough coverage of cost-benefit concepts and their underlying theory, the volumecarries the reader through the steps of a typical evaluation process, including the identification, measurement, and comparison of costs and benefits, and project selection. Topics include alternative measures of welfare change, such as the concepts of consumer surplus and compensating and equivalent variation measures, shadow pricing, nonmarket valuation techniques of contingent valuation and discrete choice experiment, perspectives on what constitutes a theoretically acceptable discount rate, the social rate of time preference, income distribution, and much more. The book also focuses on real-world applications of cost-benefit analysis in two closely related areas—environment and health care—followed by an examination of the current state of the art in cost-benefit analysis as practiced by international agencies.
Tevfik F. Nas is professor of economics at the University of Michigan-Flint.
1. Introduction2. Efficiency Norm: Pareto Optimality3. Economic Efficiency and the Market Mechanism4. Economic Efficiency and Public Goods5. Economic Efficiency in the Presence of Externalities6. Collective Decision Making7. Principles of Cost-Benefit Analysis8. Allocational Effects of Public Projects9. Measuring Costs and Benefits10. Nonmarket Valuation11. Investment Criteria and Project Selection12. The Choice of Discount Rate13. Income Distribution as an Evaluation Criterion14. Applications of Cost-Benefit Analysis15. Evaluation Issues in Environmental Studies16. Evaluation Studies: Health Care17. CBA in a Developing Country Context
Nas has been able to accomplish a difficult task – providing an understandable welfare economics foundation for those new to the subject and enough detail to make sure that these individuals are able to apply CBA to complex allocation problems such as climate change policy. All policy makers should read the book to better understand the power of CBA to address efficiency in exchange, production and allocation.