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Cost-Benefit Analysis of Multi-Level Government: The Case of EU Cohesion Policy and of US Federal Investment Policies
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Barnes and Noble
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Multi-Level Government: The Case of EU Cohesion Policy and of US Federal Investment Policies
Current price: $66.99
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Barnes and Noble
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Multi-Level Government: The Case of EU Cohesion Policy and of US Federal Investment Policies
Current price: $66.99
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This book provides an original theoretical framework for assessing public investment policies co-financed by Union (Federal) governments. This framework is applied to two important case studies: the EU Cohesion Policy and the US Federal Investment Policies.
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Multi-Level Government
sheds light on a number of outstanding issues of economic theory by extending the theory of shadow prices, and provides guidance to real-world decision makers. In particular, the following questions are addressed:
In which circumstances is intervention by higher level government in Member States through investment policies justified?
Is there a welfare economics rationale to underpin interregional equity? What is the relationship between interregional and interpersonal income distribution? How can social exclusion be included in cost-benefit tests?
How can a higher level of government allocate financial resources to investment policies before it bargains over the related programming documents with lower levels of government?
In these circumstances, how can optimal matching rates be derived under binding or non binding budgetary constraints?
How can such an analytical framework provide guidance for real-world decision makers?
Guidelines such as the
Impact Assessment Guidelines
(European Commission),
the Green Book
(British Treasury), and
Guidelines and Discount Rates for Benefit-Cost Analysis of Federal Programs
(Executive Office of the US President) are also analyzed.
The book will be of interest to policy makers, postgraduate students and researchers in cost-benefit analysis, welfare economics, public choice, public finance, multi-level government economics, and income distribution issues.
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Multi-Level Government
sheds light on a number of outstanding issues of economic theory by extending the theory of shadow prices, and provides guidance to real-world decision makers. In particular, the following questions are addressed:
In which circumstances is intervention by higher level government in Member States through investment policies justified?
Is there a welfare economics rationale to underpin interregional equity? What is the relationship between interregional and interpersonal income distribution? How can social exclusion be included in cost-benefit tests?
How can a higher level of government allocate financial resources to investment policies before it bargains over the related programming documents with lower levels of government?
In these circumstances, how can optimal matching rates be derived under binding or non binding budgetary constraints?
How can such an analytical framework provide guidance for real-world decision makers?
Guidelines such as the
Impact Assessment Guidelines
(European Commission),
the Green Book
(British Treasury), and
Guidelines and Discount Rates for Benefit-Cost Analysis of Federal Programs
(Executive Office of the US President) are also analyzed.
The book will be of interest to policy makers, postgraduate students and researchers in cost-benefit analysis, welfare economics, public choice, public finance, multi-level government economics, and income distribution issues.