Lomborgb an economic approach to the environment

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Lomborgb an economic approach to the environment

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_ _ Report Information from ProQuest 27 June 2015 03:42 _ 27 June 2015 ProQuest Table of contents An Economic Approach to the Environment 27 June 2015 ii ProQuest Document of An Economic Approach to the Environment Author: Lomborg, Bjorn ProQuest document link Abstract: For example: Since one of the main reasons we cut down natural habitat is to increase farming output for a growing population, one proposed policy is to increase agricultural yields through research and development, making it possible to feed more people with less land Links: Check for full text Full text: Economists haven't enjoyed much popularity since the financial crisis, with their profession painted as recklessly focused on flimsy mathematical models over common sense But in tackling humanity's biggest challenges climate change, malaria, natural disasters, education we need more economic science, not less Cost-benefit analysis, in particular, is a far more effective and moral approach than basing decisions on the media's roving gaze or the loudness of competing interest groups In our time of austerity, policy makers are reducing spending across the board This makes it especially vital that the money we spend achieves as much as possible Cost-benefit analysis can seem cold a hardnosed, money-focused, GDP-is-God approach But a world of scarce and competing resources requires it, and proper cost-benefit analysis encompasses much more than simple economic costs Take civil war Cost-benefit analysis doesn't just measure the costs of weapons or of houses bombed It also estimates the damages of disruptions to lives and societies, and not just while the war is raging but also over the years of patching up Likewise it doesn't measure only the number of lives lost to violence Many more people die because warravaged economies contract or collapse, leaving individuals with fewer resources to treat disease and overcome adversity Proper cost-benefit analysis also attempts to measure other impacts, such as reduced livelihoods, increased health-care costs, and spikes in violent crime all of which can long outlast a formal civil war When economists can identify more of these factors more clearly, decision makers can better weigh competing uses of funds and identify the most promising My think tank, the Copenhagen Consensus Center, promotes the use of cost-benefit analysis to yield smarter, better-prioritized spending on global challenges We have consistently found that the investments highlighted by rigorous cost-benefit analyses are the same ones highlighted by those in the world's most vulnerable communities though they are often not the investments making headlines or earning celebrity endorsements In 2004 and 2008, we commissioned panels of more than 50 world-class economists including several Nobel laureates to assess responses to global problems based on volumes of new cost-benefit analysis research In 2004, the project recommended (and thereby helped catalyze) greater spending on HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment In 2008, it led to more investment in the delivery of micronutrients to malnourished populations This May, for our 2012 project, more than 60 economists (including four Nobel laureates) will examine the latest cost-benefit evidence on many issues, such as protecting the world's biodiversity This is a challenge we hear much about But while environmental campaigns trying to focus attention on cute animals or areas of natural beauty may be good for political attention, they are rarely the best way to long-term good In new work for the Copenhagen Consensus 2012, researchers have prepared unorthodox proposals that could be substantially more effective For example: Since one of the main reasons we cut down natural habitat is to increase farming output for a growing population, one proposed policy is to increase agricultural yields through research and development, making it possible to feed more people with less land This is a controversial answer to the challenge of the loss of biodiversity, but one which might more, at lower cost, than our current efforts 27 June 2015 Page of ProQuest Of course, calculations of GDP and cold cash aren't the only relevant factors in making decisions about war and peace, global health and the like But smart, sober economic analysis can be used a lot more, and it can improve countless lives Mr Lomborg is the author of "The Skeptical Environmentalist" (Cambridge Press, 2001) and "Cool It" (Knopf, 2007) He directs the Copenhagen Consensus Center and is an adjunct professor at Copenhagen Business School Credit: By Bjorn Lomborg Subject: Research; Acquired immune deficiency syndrome AIDS; Mathematical models; Gross Domestic Product GDP; Biological diversity; Economic policy; Environmental protection; Publication title: Wall Street Journal,   Eastern edition Pages: A.13 Publication year: 2012 Publication date: Apr 24, 2012 Publisher: Dow Jones & Company Inc Place of publication: New York, N.Y Country of publication: United States Publication subject: Business And Economics Banking And Finance ISSN: 00999660 Source type: Newspapers Language of publication: English Document type: Commentary ProQuest document ID: 1008969519 Document URL: http://search.proquest.com/docview/1008969519?accountid=36155 Copyright: (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc Reproduced with permission of copyright owner Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission Last updated: 2012-06-29 Database: ProQuest Central _ Contact ProQuest Copyright  2015 ProQuest LLC All rights reserved - Terms and Conditions 27 June 2015 Page of ProQuest

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