Economics and the environment / (Record no. 2937)
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| 000 -LEADER | |
|---|---|
| fixed length control field | 07828cam a22001694a 4500 |
| 020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER | |
| ISBN | 9780471763093 (pbk.) |
| 050 00 - CALL NUMBER | |
| Classification number | HD75.6 |
| Item number | .G66 |
| 100 1# - AUTHOR | |
| Personal name | Goodstein, Eban S., |
| 245 10 - TITLE | |
| Title | Economics and the environment / |
| Statement of responsibility, etc | Eban S. Goodstein. |
| 250 ## - EDITION | |
| Edition statement | 5th ed. |
| 260 ## - PUBLICATION INFORMATION | |
| Place of publication | Hoboken, NJ : |
| Name of publisher | John Wiley & Sons, |
| Year of publication | c2008. |
| 300 ## - DESCRIPTION | |
| Number of Pages | xvi, 512 p. : |
| Other physical details | ill. ; |
| Dimensions | 24 cm. |
| 500 ## - NOTES | |
| General note | Includes index. |
| 505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE | |
| Table of Content | Introduction --<br/>1. Four economic questions about global warming --<br/>1.0. Introduction --<br/>1.1. How much pollution is too much? --<br/>1.2. Is government up to the job? --<br/>1.3. How can we do better? --<br/>1.4. Can we resolve global issues? --<br/>1.5. Summary. pt. I. How much pollution is too much? --<br/>2. Ethics and economics --<br/>2.0. Introduction --<br/>2.1. Utility and utilitarianism --<br/>2.2. Social welfare --<br/>2.3. Summary --<br/>3. Pollution and resource degradation as externalities --<br/>3.0. Introduction --<br/>3.1. The open access problem --<br/>3.2. The public goods problem --<br/>3.3. Summary --<br/>Appendix 3A. Overfishing, ITQs, and aquaculture --<br/>4. The efficiency standard --<br/>4.0. Introduction --<br/>4.1. Efficiency defined --<br/>4.2. Efficient pollution levels --<br/>4.3. Marginals and totals --<br/>4.4. The Coase theorem introduced --<br/>4.5. Air pollution control in Baltimore : calculating the efficient standard --<br/>4.6. The ethical basis of the efficiency standard --<br/>4.7. Summary --<br/>5. The safety standard --<br/>5.0. Introduction --<br/>5.1. Defining the right to safety --<br/>5.2. The safety standard : inefficient --<br/>5.3. The safety standard : not cost-effective --<br/>5.4. The safety standard : regressive? --<br/>5.5. Siting hazardous waste facilities : safety versus efficiency --<br/>5.6. Summary --<br/>6. Sustainability : a neoclassical view --<br/>6.0. Introduction --<br/>6.1. Measuring sustainability : net national welfare --<br/>6.2. Natural capital depreciation --<br/>6.3. Future benefits, costs, and discounting --<br/>6.4. An example of discounting : lightbulbs --<br/>6.5. Choosing the "right" discount rate for pollution control --<br/>6.6. Social discounting versus market discounting --<br/>6.7. Summary --<br/>Appendix 6A. Nonrenewable resource economics 101 --<br/>7. Sustainability : an ecological view --<br/>7.0. Introduction --<br/>7.1. Malthus and ecological economics --<br/>7.2. Measuring sustainability --<br/>7.3. The precautionary principle --<br/>7.4. Markets, governments, and the EIS --<br/>7.5. The ecological-neoclassical debate in context --<br/>7.6. Summary --<br/>Appendix 7A. Game theory and the safe minimum standard --<br/>8. Measuring the benefits of environmental protection --<br/>8.0. Introduction --<br/>8.1. Use, option, and existence value : types of nonmarket benefits --<br/>8.2. Consumer surplus, WTP, and WTA : measuring benefits --<br/>8.3. Risk : assessment and perception --<br/>8.4. Measuring benefits I : contingent valuation --<br/>8.5. Measuring benefits II : travel cost --<br/>8.6. Measuring benefits III : Hedonic regression --<br/>8.7. The value of human life --<br/>8.8. Summary --<br/>Appendix. 8A. WTA and WTP redux --<br/>9. Measuring the costs of environmental protection --<br/>9.0. Introduction --<br/>9.1. Engineering costs --<br/>9.2. Productivity impacts of regulation --<br/>9.3. Employment impacts of regulation --<br/>9.4. Monopoly costs --<br/>9.5. General equilibrium effects --<br/>9.6. Summary --<br/>10. Benefit-cost in practice : implementing the efficiency standard --<br/>10.0. Introduction --<br/>10.1. Doing benefit-cost : lead standards --<br/>10.2. Doing benefit-cost : landfill regulation --<br/>10.3. Political influence in benefit-cost --<br/>10.4. Is benefit-cost up to the job? --<br/>10.5. Summary --<br/>11. Is more really better? : consumption and welfare --<br/>11.0. Introduction --<br/>11.1. Money and happiness --<br/>11.2. Social norms and the rat race --<br/>11.3. Positional goods and consumption externalities --<br/>11.4. Welfare with social consumption --<br/>11.5. Controlling the impact of consumption --<br/>11.6. Summary. pt. II. Is government up to the job? --<br/>12. The political economy of environmental regulation --<br/>12.0. Introduction --<br/>12.1. The process of environmental regulation --<br/>12.2. Regulation under imperfect information --<br/>12.3. Bureaucratic discretion and political influence --<br/>12.4. Who wins the influence game? --<br/>12.5. Political reform of regulation --<br/>12.6. Better information, more democracy --<br/>12.7. Summary --<br/>13. An overview of environmental legislation --<br/>13.0. Introduction --<br/>13.1. Cleaning the air --<br/>13.2. Fishable and swimmable waters --<br/>13.3. Hazardous waste disposal on land --<br/>13.4. Chemicals and pesticides --<br/>13.5. Endangered species protection --<br/>13.6. Summary --<br/>14. The regulatory record : achievements and obstacles --<br/>14.0. Introduction --<br/>14.1. Accomplishments of environmental regulation --<br/>14.2. Normative criticism of regulation --<br/>14.3. Cost-effectiveness criticisms of regulation --<br/>14.4. Beyond regulation? : promoting clean technology --<br/>14.5. Summary --<br/>15. Monitoring and enforcement --<br/>15.0. Introduction --<br/>15.1. The economics of crime --<br/>15.2. The economics of punishment --<br/>15.3. The compliance record --<br/>15.4. The political economy of enforcement --<br/>15.5. Citizen enforcement --<br/>15.6. Cost-effective enforcement --<br/>15.7. Summary. pt. III. How can we do better? --<br/>16. Incentive-based regulation : theory --<br/>16.0. Introduction --<br/>16.1. The cost-effectiveness rule --<br/>16.2. IB regulation and cost-effectiveness --<br/>16.3. IB regulation and technological progress --<br/>16.4. Potential problems with IB regulation --<br/>16.5. Summary --<br/>Appendix 16A. Imperfect regulation in an uncertain world --<br/>Appendix 16B. Incentive-compatible regulation --<br/>17. Incentive-based regulation : practice --<br/>17.0. Introduction --<br/>17.1. Lead and chlorofluorocarbons --<br/>17.2. Trading urban air pollutants --<br/>17.3. Marketable permits and acid rain --<br/>17.4. Recent US cap-and-trade moves : carbon dioxide and mercury? --<br/>17.5. Pollution taxes and their relatives in the United States --<br/>17.6. Carbon drolide trading and taxes in Europe --<br/>17.7. Summary --<br/>18. promoting clean technology : theory --<br/>18.0. Introduction --<br/>18.1. Path dependence and clean technology --<br/>18.2. Clean technology defined --<br/>18.3. If you're so smart, why aren't you rich? --<br/>18.4. Picking the winning path --<br/>18.5. Promoting small-scale CTs --<br/>18.6 Promoting large-scale CTs --<br/>18.7. Clean technology : two case studies --<br/>18.8. Summary --<br/>19. Energy policy and the environment --<br/>19.0. Introduction --<br/>19.1. Technology options : electricity and heat --<br/>19.2. Policy options : electricity and heat --<br/>19.3. Technology options : transport --<br/>19.4. Policy options : transport --<br/>19.5. Slowing global warming at a profit? --<br/>19.6. Summary. pt. IV. Can we resolve global issues? --<br/>20. Poverty, population, and the environment --<br/>20.0. Introduction --<br/>20.1. Poverty and the environment --<br/>20.2. The population picture in perspective --<br/>20.3. An economic approach to family size --<br/>20.4. Controlling population growth --<br/>20.5. Consumption and the global environment --<br/>20.6. Envisioning a sustainable future --<br/>20.7. Summary --<br/>21. Environmental policy in poor countries --<br/>21.0. Introduction --<br/>21.1. The political economy of sustainable development --<br/>21.2. Ending environmentally damaging subsidies --<br/>21.3. Establishing and enforcing property rights --<br/>21.4. Regulatory approaches --<br/>21.5. Sustainable technology : development and transfer --<br/>21.6. Resource conservation and debt relief --<br/>21.7. Trade and the environment --<br/>21.8. Summary --<br/>22. The economics of global agreements --<br/>22.0. Introduction --<br/>22.1. Agreements as public goods --<br/>22.2. Monitoring and enforcement --<br/>22.3. The ozone layer and biodiversity --<br/>22.4 Stopping global warning : theory --<br/>22.5. Stopping global warming : reality --<br/>22.6 Summary. |
| 650 #0 - SUBJECTS | |
| Topical Term | Economic development |
| General subdivision | Environmental aspects. |
| 942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
| Koha item type | Books |
| Withdrawn status | Lost status | Collection code | Home library | Current library | Shelving location | Date acquired | Full call number | Accession Number | Copy number | Koha item type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | Methodist University Library Main | Methodist University Library Main | General Stacks | HD75.6 .G66 | 37902 | 1 | Books |