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National Security Spending Doesn’t Have to Clear Cost-Benefit Test, Obama Administration Confirms. But Health Regulations?

Issues of national security have always enjoyed a free pass when it comes to the use of cost-benefit analysis (CBA) as the primary form of making decisions.  For example, no military official or politician interested in keeping his job would ever dare publicly question whether the additional money spent on extra armor for tanks to keep soldiers safer could be put to better use somewhere else.

There are plenty of reasons why we are willing to accord national security decisions this special treatment.  For one thing, as Ezra Klein noted recently, “we're uncomfortable subjecting military demands to traditional economic analysis.”  Using CBA for military decisions necessarily puts us in a difficult ethical position:  It seeks to prioritize the goal of “efficiency” over values that many Americans hold truly sacred, such as the duty of protecting the lives of our soldiers.  These values often represent moral absolutes on which we aren't willing to compromise—particularly for the sake of efficiency.  Thus, I don't think many people are willing to accept that there is an economically “optimal” amount of soldiers’ deaths.  If a soldier’s life is priceless, every reasonable measure should be taken to protect these lives.

But there are practical reasons for opposing the use of CBA in national security decision-making, as well.  Every year, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) produces its annual Report to Congress on the Benefits and Costs of Regulations, which, among other things, seeks to provide an “estimate of the total benefits and costs of regulations reviewed by OMB,” both for the past fiscal year and for the past ten-year period.  Every year, however, these reports exclude from consideration virtually all regulations adopted by the Department of Homeland Security.  As the reports explain, this exclusion is necessary because “The benefits of homeland security regulation are a function of the likelihood and severity of a hypothetical future terrorist attack; on both issues, judgments are conjectural. For this reason, such benefits are very difficult to forecast, quantify, and monetize.”

This year’s report—released in draft on Monday and the first of the Obama Administration—is no different.  It fails to monetize the benefits for two of the three Department of Homeland Security regulations from the previous fiscal year, and thus foregoes any effort to determine whether the costs of these regulations outweigh their benefits.

But these reasons for rejecting the use of CBA for national security decision-making apply with equal force to decisions regarding health, safety, and environmental regulations.  These regulations implicate cherished values, such as protecting human lives in the face of involuntary hazards and preserving the natural environment for future generations to enjoy.  These regulations also seek to produce benefits that are no less impossible “to forecast, quantify, and monetize.”  Indeed, the various IPCC reports are replete with analyses attempting to predict the “likelihood and severity” of global climate change and its effects on people and the environment.  If CBA is inappropriate for national security decisions, then it must be inappropriate in the context of environmental, health, and safety regulation as well—there really is no principled way to distinguish between the two.

For too long, CBA's defenders have attempted to portray it as a one-size-fits-all approach to resolving any problem that comes before a governmental decision-maker.  As the issues of national security and of environmental, health, and safety risks demonstrate, CBA is inadequate to the task when it comes to situations involving multidimensional decisions.  Unfortunately, these are exactly the kinds of decisions that people expect government to make all the time.  One wonders why the overreliance on this flawed approach to regulatory decision is permitted to persist.

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James Goodwin | September 25, 2009

National Security Spending Doesn’t Have to Clear Cost-Benefit Test, Obama Administration Confirms. But Health Regulations?

Issues of national security have always enjoyed a free pass when it comes to the use of cost-benefit analysis (CBA) as the primary form of making decisions.  For example, no military official or politician interested in keeping his job would ever dare publicly question whether the additional money spent on extra armor for tanks to […]

Ben Somberg | September 25, 2009

Workplace Safety News This Week

The Chemical Safety Board released its report Thursday on the 2008 explosion at the Imperial Sugar plant in Georgia, finding that the incident was “entirely preventable” (Reuters article, full report). Ken Ward Jr. gave helpful context for the announcement and followed up afterward with the criticism from unions for the Chemical Safety Board’s “decision to […]

Christine Klein | September 24, 2009

Coveting Their Neighbor’s Water: the Importance of Hood v. City of Memphis

The interstate water wars have gone underground. For more than a century, the U.S. Supreme Court has been the arbiter of last resort to settle fights between states over the right to use surface streams that cross state lines. But now, the high Court may be asked to settle a long-standing feud between Mississippi and […]

Alice Kaswan | September 23, 2009

Second Circuit’s Decision in Connecticut v. AEP Makes Clear No One is Above the Law

The Second Circuit’s ruling Monday in State of Connecticut, et al. v. American Electric Power Company Inc., et al. revived a public nuisance lawsuit against the nation’s five largest electric power companies. The case opens the door to a potential judicial remedy for the alleged harm and increases the pressure on Congress and the Executive […]

Holly Doremus | September 23, 2009

Wishful Thinking Doesn’t Justify Grizzly Delisting

Cross-posted by permission from Legal Planet. Federal Judge Donald Molloy in Montana has ordered the Fish and Wildlife Service to restore grizzly bears in the Yellowstone area to the list of endangered and threatened species. Judge Molloy refused to allow FWS to delist the grizzly on the basis of unsupported wishful thinking about the bear’s […]

Amy Sinden | September 22, 2009

Obama’s Frank Talk on Climate at the U.N.: More Please

Imagine if the end of the world were coming and everyone was just too polite to talk about it. That’s been the eerie feeling I’ve gotten over the past eight months listening to the President talk about energy policy. Not wanting to be a downer, he couches his energy talk in positive spin: We’re going […]

Holly Doremus | September 22, 2009

A Promising Step Toward a National Ocean Policy

Cross-posted by permission from Legal Planet. In June, President Obama created an Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force, and directed it to make recommendations for a national ocean policy.  The Task Force got right to work.  Now, after convening two dozen expert roundtables, inviting public comment, and holding the first of six public sessions, the Task […]

Ben Somberg | September 21, 2009

9th Circuit’s Strong Words for EPA’s Office of Civil Rights

As first reported by Law 360 on Thursday: In a decision reversing a ruling in favor of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, a federal appeals court has chastised the agency’s Office of Civil Rights for what the court said was its apparent failure to consider alleged civil rights violations in a timely manner. “What the […]

Shana Campbell Jones | September 18, 2009

The Poop on Manure in the Water: We’re Sick of It

Today’s New York Times article about excess manure in the water is a stark reminder of what can happen when an environmental problem isn’t addressed: people get really sick. While the article is shocking — it describes how families in Wisconsin living close to dairy farms suffered from chronic diarrhea, stomach problems, and severe ear […]