成本效益分析及相对定位

C. Sunstein, R. Frank
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引用次数: 233

摘要

目前对监管收益的估计太低,而且可能太低,因为它们忽略了估值的一个中心点——即人们不仅关心自己的绝对经济地位,还关心自己的相对经济地位。我们表明,政府目前将统计生命的价值定为约400万美元,它应该雇用470万至700万美元之间的价值。对相关证据的保守解读表明,当政府机构不确定如何在合理范围内评估监管利益时,他们应该选择接近或接近上限。我们首先表明,美国关于是否进行成本效益分析的第一代辩论即将结束,成本效益方法的倡导者取得了越来越大的胜利。目前正在进行的第二代辩论涉及如何评估成本和收益的重要问题。传统的估计告诉我们,一个人在单独行动时,愿意牺牲多少收入来换取,比如说,工作安全的增加。但这些估计建立在一个隐含的、毫无根据的关键假设之上,即人们的幸福只取决于绝对收入。这种假设是错误的。相当多的证据表明,相对收入也是一个重要因素,这表明,除非绝对收入的增减改变了相对收入,否则它们是次要的。当一项法规要求所有工人购买额外的安全产品时,每个工人都放弃了等量的其他商品,因此没有工人经历相对生活水平的下降。结果是,一个人会更看重安全的全面提升,而不是他自己购买的安全提升。监管决定应基于前者的估值,而不是后者。当使用前一种估值时,美元价值应大幅增加——保守地说,应增加25%至50%。如此大幅度的向上修正显然对目前根据成本效益分析得出的广泛政策辩论具有重要影响。我们还表明,对相对地位重要性的理解表明了就业法中各种不可放弃的合同条款的基本原理,如医疗保健、育儿假、工作保障和休闲。这些被许多经济学家抨击为减少福利的术语,给人们带来了重要的好处,但对相对经济地位几乎没有影响。与促进工作场所安全的规定一样,这样的合同条款在所有人都购买时可能比单独购买时更具吸引力。
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Cost-Benefit Analysis and Relative Position
Current estimates of regulatory benefits are too low, and likely far too low, because they ignore a central point about valuation - namely, that people care not only about their absolute economic position, but also about their relative economic position. We show that where the government currently pegs the value of a statistical life at about $4 million, it ought to employ a value between $4.7 million and $7 million. A conservative reading of the relevant evidence suggests that when government agencies are unsure how to value regulatory benefits along a reasonable range, they should make choices toward or at the upper end. We begin by showing that the nation is nearing the end of a first-generation debate about whether to do cost-benefit analysis, with a mounting victory for advocates of the cost-benefit approach. The second-generation debate, now underway, involves important issues about how to value costs and benefits. Conventional estimates tell us the amount of income an individual, acting in isolation, would be willing sacrifice in return for, say, an increase in safety on the job. But these estimates rest on the implicit, undefended, and crucial assumption that people's well-being depends only on absolute income. This assumption is false. Considerable evidence suggests that relative income is also an important factor, suggesting that gains or losses in absolute income are of secondary importance unless they alter relative income. When a regulation requires all workers to purchase additional safety, each worker gives up the same amount of other goods, so no worker experiences a decline in relative living standards. The upshot is that an individual will value an across-the-board increase in safety much more highly than an increase in safety that he alone purchases. Regulatory decisions should be based on the former valuation rather than the latter. When the former valuation is used, dollar values should be increased substantially - conservatively, by 25 to 50 percent. Upward revisions of such magnitude clearly have important implications for a broad range of policy debates currently informed by cost-benefit analysis. We also show that an understanding of the importance of relative position suggests a rationale for various nonwaivable contractual terms in employment law, such as health care, parental leave, job security, and leisure. These terms, which have been attacked as welfare-reducing by many economists, give people important benefits with little or no impact on relative economic position. As with regulations that boost workplace safety, such contract terms may therefore be much more attractive when purchased by all than when purchased in isolation.
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