Some Benefits and Costs of Cost-Benefit Analysis

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Some Benefits and Costs of Cost-Benefit Analysis
Abstract
The American administrative state has become a cost-benefit state, at least in the sense that prevailing executive orders require agencies to proceed only if the benefits justify the costs. Some people celebrate this development; others abhor it. For defenders of the cost-benefit state, the antonym of their ideal is, alternately, regulation based on dogmas, intuitions, pure expressivism, political preferences, or interest-group power. Seen most sympathetically, the focus on costs and benefits is a neo-Benthamite effort to attend to the real-world consequences of regulations, and it casts a pragmatic, skeptical light on modern objections to the administrative state, invoking public-choice theory and the supposed self-serving decisions of unelected bureaucrats. The focus on costs and benefits is also a valuable effort to go beyond coarse arguments, from both the right and the left, that tend to ask this unhelpful question: “Which side are you on?” In the future, however, there will be much better ways, which we might consider neo-Millian, to identify those consequences: (1) by relying less on unreliable ex ante projections and more on actual evaluations; (2) by focusing directly on welfare and not relying on imperfect proxies; and (3) by attending closely to distributional considerations – on who is helped and who is hurt.
Report Number
ID 3825061
Report Type
SSRN Scholarly Paper
Place
Rochester, NY
Institution
Social Science Research Network
Date
2021/04/12
Language
en
Accessed
7/28/21, 3:17 AM
Library Catalog
Extra
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3825061
Citation
Sunstein, C. R. (2021). Some Benefits and Costs of Cost-Benefit Analysis (SSRN Scholarly Paper No. ID 3825061). Social Science Research Network. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3825061