The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit Analysis

Most project impacts on environment, climate, and health are not valued in markets or in choice situations similar to market transactions. Analysts have to go beyond revealed preferences to stated preference interviews and even to deliberative processes in order to elicit preferences from which the...

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Main Author: Tore Sager
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft Open 2013-06-01
Series:European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
Online Access:https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2997
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spelling doaj-201816870f494ecda55f5e8bc75db55f2021-07-26T08:41:28ZengTU Delft OpenEuropean Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research1567-71412013-06-0113310.18757/ejtir.2013.13.3.29972613The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit AnalysisTore Sager0Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)Most project impacts on environment, climate, and health are not valued in markets or in choice situations similar to market transactions. Analysts have to go beyond revealed preferences to stated preference interviews and even to deliberative processes in order to elicit preferences from which the trade-off values (‘prices’) of the expanded cost-benefit analysis (CBA) can be deduced. The comprehensiveness dilemma of social CBA arises with the choice between calculation of ‘prices’ from revealed preferences and communicative construction of ‘prices’ on the basis of preferences stated in deliberation. New methods for eliciting preferences, such as deliberative monetary valuation, yield preferences influenced by ethical and political values. The interpretation of the analytic results then becomes problematic. The comprehensiveness dilemma is that planners must choose between a narrow CBA making good economic sense, and a comprehensive CBA with dubious economic content. By aiming for completeness, CBA changes character from being a summation of changes in individual wellbeing to being a mix of this and the summation of monetary expressions of ethical and political viewpoints and attitudes.https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2997
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tore Sager
spellingShingle Tore Sager
The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit Analysis
European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
author_facet Tore Sager
author_sort Tore Sager
title The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit Analysis
title_short The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit Analysis
title_full The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit Analysis
title_fullStr The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit Analysis
title_full_unstemmed The Comprehensiveness Dilemma of Cost-Benefit Analysis
title_sort comprehensiveness dilemma of cost-benefit analysis
publisher TU Delft Open
series European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
issn 1567-7141
publishDate 2013-06-01
description Most project impacts on environment, climate, and health are not valued in markets or in choice situations similar to market transactions. Analysts have to go beyond revealed preferences to stated preference interviews and even to deliberative processes in order to elicit preferences from which the trade-off values (‘prices’) of the expanded cost-benefit analysis (CBA) can be deduced. The comprehensiveness dilemma of social CBA arises with the choice between calculation of ‘prices’ from revealed preferences and communicative construction of ‘prices’ on the basis of preferences stated in deliberation. New methods for eliciting preferences, such as deliberative monetary valuation, yield preferences influenced by ethical and political values. The interpretation of the analytic results then becomes problematic. The comprehensiveness dilemma is that planners must choose between a narrow CBA making good economic sense, and a comprehensive CBA with dubious economic content. By aiming for completeness, CBA changes character from being a summation of changes in individual wellbeing to being a mix of this and the summation of monetary expressions of ethical and political viewpoints and attitudes.
url https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2997
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