Cost-Benefit Analysis, Who’s Your Daddy?1
Cass Sunstein
Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis, 2016, vol. 7, issue 1, 107-120
Abstract:
If policymakers could measure the actual welfare effects of regulations, and if they had a properly capacious sense of welfare, they would not need to resort to cost-benefit analysis, which gives undue weight to some values and insufficient weight to others. Surveys of self-reported well-being provide valuable information, but it is not yet possible to “map” regulatory consequences onto well-being scales. It follows that at the present time, self-reported well-being cannot be used to assess the welfare effects of regulations. Nonetheless, greatly improved understandings are inevitable, and current findings with respect to reported well-being – above all the serious adverse effects of unemployment – deserve to play a role in regulatory policymaking.
Date: 2016
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cup:jbcoan:v:7:y:2016:i:01:p:107-120_00
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