PHA-Exch> Book: A critique of the use of cost-benefit analysis in environmental policies

Claudio Schuftan cschuftan at phmovement.org
Fri Jun 20 11:34:17 PDT 2008


From: Garance UPHAM fannie.upham at gmail.com

 **Poisoned for Pennies – new book by Frank Ackerman



Island Press has just published Frank Ackerman's new book, *Poisoned for
Pennies: The Economics of Toxics and Precaution*. It presents a critique of
cost-benefit analysis, describes an alternative, precautionary approach to
policy, and applies these ideas to case studies of major environmental
policy problems, many of them involving toxic chemicals.
*[image: PoisonedforPennies]*


*
Poisoned for Pennies: The Economics of Toxics and Precaution*

By Frank Ackerman
Island Press, 2008;
352 pages, Hardcover, $50.00; Paperback: $25.00

Order from Island
Press<http://www.islandpress.org/bookstore/details.php?prod_id=1262>

Order from Amazon<http://www.amazon.com/Poisoned-Pennies-Economics-Toxics-Precaution/dp/1597264016/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1213196062&sr=1-1>

Download the Island Press Order Form
(PDF)<http://www.ase.tufts.edu/gdae/publications/other_books/Ackerman_PoisonedforPennies.pdf>

"Cost-benefit analysis" is a term that is used so frequently we rarely stop
to think about it. But relying on it can lead to some dubious conclusions,
as Frank Ackerman points out in this eye-opening book. Inventing dollar
values for human life and health, endangered species, and fragile ecosystems
does not guide us to better policies. Cost-benefit analysis, as practiced
today, could have led to damming the Grand Canyon for hydroelectric power,
leaving lead in gasoline, and other absurd and harmful decisions.

In clear, understandable language, Ackerman describes an alternative,
precautionary approach to making decisions under uncertainty. Once a mere
theory, the precautionary principle has now been applied in practice through
the European Union's REACH protocol. Citing major studies, many of which he
has directed, he shows that the precautionary approach has not only worked,
but has been relatively cheap.

Poisoned for Pennies shows how the misuse of cost-benefit analysis is
impeding efforts to clean up and protect our environment, especially in the
case of toxic chemicals. According to Ackerman, conservatives—in elected
office, in state and federal regulatory agencies, and in businesses of every
size—have argued repeatedly that environmental clean-up and protection are
simply too expensive. But as he proves, that is untrue in case after case.
The book ranges from psychological research to risk analysis to the benefits
of aggressive pesticide regulation, and from mad cow disease to vinyl
siding. You can't afford not to read it.

Selected chapters are co-authored by Rachel Massey, Elizabeth A. Stanton,
Lisa Heinzerling, Anne-Sofie Andersson, Wendy Johnecke, and Brian Roach.
Most chapters are based on research conducted at GDAE during 2003-2007.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Pricing the Priceless
Was Environmental Protection Ever A Good Idea?
The Unbearable Lightness of Regulatory Costs
Precaution, Uncertainty, and Dioxin
The Economics of Atrazine
Ignoring the Benefits of Pesticide Regulation
Mad Cows and Computer Models
Costs of Preventable Childhood Illness
Phasing Out a Problem Plastic
The Costs of REACH
Impacts of REACH on Developing Countries
How Should the United States Respond to REACH?

Frank Ackerman<http://www.ase.tufts.edu/gdae/about_us/researchers.html#ackerman>is
an economist who has written extensively about the economics of
climate
change and other environmental problems. His books include Can We Afford the
Future? Economics for a Warming World (fall 2008), Poisoned for Pennies: The
Economics of Toxics and Precaution (2008), Priceless: On Knowing the Price
of Everything and the Value of Nothing (2004), and Why Do We Recycle?
Markets, Values, and Public Policy (1997).

Read more about GDAE's research program, Economics for Health and the
Environment<http://www.ase.tufts.edu/gdae/policy_research/healthEnvironment.html>
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