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Externalities and Cost-benefit Analysis

1994
Because of the growing complexity of economic activity, externalities can be a major cause of market failure. Since they are especially related to the environment, examples can be derived from your own observations. These should lead to a consideration of the actual action taken to allow for them.
J. Harvey, M. K. Johnson
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Externalities and External Costs in Transport Planning

2021
The concept of “externality” is adopted broadly within the transport literature. By definition, an externality arises when the actions of a subject have an impact on one or more other subjects, and when such impact is not (fully) compensated for by the first subject.
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External costs of future fusion plants

Fusion Engineering and Design, 2001
In the framework of the Socio-Economic Research on Fusion (SERF), which was jointly conducted by the European Commission and the Fusion Associations, external costs of future fusion plants were calculated. All the damages that are not reflected in the market price are called external costs. The ExternE methodology was applied.
Hamacher, T.   +6 more
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Cost-effectiveness of public automated external defibrillators

Resuscitation, 2019
Despite a consistent association with improved outcomes, public automated external defibrillators (AEDs) are rarely used in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. One of the barriers towards increased use might be cost-effectiveness.We compared the cost-effectiveness of public AEDs to no AEDs for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the United States over a life-
Lars W. Andersen   +4 more
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External costs

Cost–benefit analysis is the only method of economic evaluation that can effectively indicate whether a health care treatment or intervention is worthwhile. In this thoroughly updated and revised second edition, Robert Brent expands the scope of the field by including the latest concepts and applications throughout all regions of the world.
Luke Brander   +5 more
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Migration cost externality and interregional equilibrium

The Annals of Regional Science, 1994
"This paper will investigate the characteristics of population allocation between two regions in the presence of migration cost. It will also examine both populations and the non-migration range of the initial population in which migration does not occur, in social optimum and market equilibrium with central government intervention, to reveal ...
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Externalities, Fixed Costs and Information

Kyklos, 1998
The well-known theoretical solutions to the problem of externalities developed by Arthur C. Pigou and Ronald H. Coase--taxation according to measured preferences, bargaining under low transaction costs--have restated the problem of social cost, rather than addressed it: externalities exist where preferences are difficult to measure and transaction ...
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The Problem of External Costs

2000
IN PART II OF this book, we addressed the problem of managerial self-interest seeking at shareholders’ expense. However, the divergence of interests between utility maximizing managers and shareholders interested in value maximization is not the only conflict of interests bearing on the corporate firm.
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External walls and heating costs

Building Research and Practice, 1973
Ing. arch. F. Jech, now retired but formerly employed in the office of the chief architect in Prague, Czechoslovakia, has made a study of the development of external wall structures in relation to the costs of central heating in residential buildings. Although this research is based on the climatic conditions of his country, it contains information of ...
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