Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 16 OF 17

Main Title The measurement of environmental and resource values : theory and methods /
Author Freeman, A. Myrick,
Publisher Resources for the Future,
Year Published 1993
OCLC Number 28847951
ISBN 0915707683; 9780915707683; 0915707691; 9780915707690
Subjects Environmental policy--Cost effectiveness ; Environmental policy--Evaluation ; Bewertung ; Umweltschutz ; Milieueconomie
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EHBM  HC79.E5F713 1993 CEMM/ACESD Library/Narragansett,RI 04/11/2023
EMBM  HC79.E5F713 1993 NRMRL/GWERD Library/Ada,OK 10/11/1996
ESAM  HC79.E5F713 1993 Region 10 Library/Seattle,WA 08/19/1994
Collation xviii, 516 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Notes
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Contents Notes
Resource evaluation and public policy -- Measuring values and benefits : an overview -- Defining and measuring welfare changes : basic theory -- Models for indirect benefit estimation : basic theory -- Nonuse values -- Hypothetical methods for direct and indirect valuation -- Aggregation of values across time -- Values in an uncertain world -- Environmental quality as a factor input -- Valuing longevity and health -- Property value models -- Hedonic wage models -- Recrational uses of natural resource systems -- Conclusions. Freeman's The Benefits of Environmental Improvement: Theory and Practice, published by RFF in 1979, examined in a clear and objective manner the relationship between benefits and environmental decision-making and the problems involved in measuring the values of environmental changes. The years following publication of this state-of-the-art study have seen a virtual explosion of new theoretical developments and empirical applications in resource and environmental valuation. In the manner of its distinguished predecessor this new work presents a comprehensive, rigorous treatment of benefit measurement that includes entirely reworked analyses of such topics as the contingent valuation technique, valuing improved health, property value models, and the travel cost approach. New topics include intertemporal welfare measures, the use of discrete choice models, the valuation of risk changes, hedonic wage models, nonuse values, and measurement of the cost of environmental policies. The Measurement of Environmental and Resource Values provides an introduction to the principal methods and techniques of resource and environmental valuation to professional economists and graduate students who are not directly engaged in the field. Practitioners in the field will welcome the work as an up-to-date reference on recent developments in the theory and methods underlying the practice of resource valuation. Readers of every kind will understand more clearly and appreciate the important role that estimates of the economic values of environmental and resource services can play in supporting resource and environmental management decisions.