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Valuing the Environment: Methodological and Measurement Issues Rudiger Pethig

Valuing the Environment: Methodological and Measurement Issues By Rudiger Pethig

Valuing the Environment: Methodological and Measurement Issues by Rudiger Pethig


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Summary

But it is one thing to identify the qualitative nature of the problem at an abstract conceptual level and quite another thing to place specific money values on pollution damage and society's valuation of the environment, respectively, in the context of specific pollution (control) problems.

Valuing the Environment: Methodological and Measurement Issues Summary

Valuing the Environment: Methodological and Measurement Issues by Rudiger Pethig

During the last decades, environmental economics as a science has been very successful in improving our understanding of environment-economy interdepen dence. Using conventional economic methodology, environmental aspects have been explicitly incorporated into economic models making use of the concept of externality. This concept was already familiar to economists long before evidence of severe environmental deterioration found its way into the headlines and peo ple's awareness. But before that time, external effects were not considered as being empirically very relevant, they seemed to be -like the example of the bees and the fruit trees - somewhat bucolic in nature. All that changed dramatically when it was no longer possible (or easy) to ignore the large-scale environmental disruption with its negative feedback on consumers and producers caused by growing pollution and excessive use of environmental resources. In diagnosing the discrepancy between private and social cost as the cause of the problem, the externality paradigm proved very useful. The correct diagnosis implies the straightforward cure to internalise all external cost, namely the damage cost of pollution. But it is one thing to identify the qualitative nature of the problem at an abstract conceptual level and quite another thing to place specific money values on pollution damage and society's valuation of the environment, respectively, in the context of specific pollution (control) problems. Very often it is controversial not only how inefficient the no-policy situation is but also what exactly the net benefit of any public action of reducing pollution is.

Table of Contents

I Basic Issues of Valuing the Environment.- 1. Ecological Dynamics and the Valuation of Environmental Change.- 2. The Value of Non-Market Natural Assets as Production Factor.- 3. Valuation and Aggregation.- II Conceptual Problems of Valuation under Uncertainty.- 4. The Need for Alternatives to the Expected Utility Approach in Environmental Risk Economics or Who is Afraid of Russian Roulette?.- 5. Welfare Measurement under Uncertainty.- 6. Valuing Changes in Health: A Production Function Approach.- III Measuring Values.- 7. Nonuse Value: Reflections on the Definition and Measurement.- 8. An Assessment of the Contingent Valuation Method.- 9. The Use of Stated Preference Methods in the Evaluation of Environmental Change.- 10. A Comparison of Economic Valuation Methods.- IV Energy-Related Valuation Procedures.- 11. Energy Metrics: On Various Valuation Properties of Energy.- 12. Applying EMergy Analysis to Vineyard Cultivation and Wine Production.- 13. Energy Analysis and Sustainable Development.- List of Contributors.

Additional information

NPB9780792326021
9780792326021
0792326024
Valuing the Environment: Methodological and Measurement Issues by Rudiger Pethig
New
Hardback
Springer
1994-06-30
348
N/A
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