Costs Benefits Rules when Nature Counts

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2006

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Abstract

This paper analyses normative implications of relaxing the conventional welfare economics assumptions anthropocentrism and welfarism, i.e. that only human well-being counts intrinsically, combined with various types of non-selfish individual preferences. Social decision rules are derived for the optimum provision of a public good (environmental quality). It is shown that in several cases analysed, the basic Samuelson rule still holds, in terms of aggregate marginal willingness to pay.

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Altruism; welfarism; anthropocentrism; cost-benefit analysis;public good provision; social preferences; conditional cooperation

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