Regulatory Review of Environmental Policy: The Potential Role of Health-Health Analysis.
Health-health analysis (HHA) posits a seemingly unassailable criterion for regulatory assessment: policies intended to protect human health ought to exhibit positive health benefits. Despite the apparent logic of this criterion, it is important to ask whether it would aid in the quest for better public policies. In the context of environmental issues, we find that HHA can be useful by reminding us that it is the net health impact of a proposed regulation that can be important. However, we also find that in most applications the health impacts of regulatory compliance costs are unlikely to be significant. Conventional benefit-cost analysis ought to remain the principal tool of economic assessment of environmental laws and regulations. Copyright 1994 by Kluwer Academic Publishers
Year of publication: |
1994
|
---|---|
Authors: | Portney, Paul R ; Stavins, Robert N |
Published in: |
Journal of Risk and Uncertainty. - Springer. - Vol. 8.1994, 1, p. 111-22
|
Publisher: |
Springer |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Preferences for Life Saving Programs: How the Public Discounts Time and Age.
Cropper, Maureen L, (1994)
-
Discounting and the Evaluation of Lifesaving Programs.
Cropper, Maureen L, (1990)
-
Economics and the Clean Air Act.
Portney, Paul R, (1990)
- More ...