Join us.

We’re working to create a just society and preserve a healthy environment for future generations. Donate today to help.

Donate

The Shaky Legal and Policy Foundations of Cost-Benefit Orthodoxy in Environmental Law

This post was originally published on LPE Blog and is part of a symposium on the future of cost-benefit analysis. Reprinted with permission.

In the actual work of crafting the regulatory safeguards that protect our environment and health, cost-benefit analysis has been largely ineffectual and irrelevant. Indeed, its ineffectiveness has been so profound as to prompt even its most ardent practitioners and proponents to question whether it has any impact on agency decisions at all. Meanwhile, it plays at best a minor role in the legal standards that actually govern agency decision-making. Despite all this, a certain cost-benefit orthodoxy has become remarkably entrenched in environmental policy circles. Especially in an era when so many progressive ideas are in ascendance, why does the idea of regulatory review based on CBA, first brought to us half a century ago by the two Ronalds—Ronald Coase and Ronald Reagan—have such staying power?

Decades ago, political scientist Charles Lindblom observed that proponents of what he called “the synoptic ideal”—the idea that we can comprehensively assess the pros and cons of every conceivable alternative and choose the optimum—inevitably talk as though this approach is the only rational decision-making process. That tendency is on full display among the CBA crowd, who often treat CBA as synonymous with rationality.

The problem with this ideal is that, while attractive in theory, it flounders in practice. When the limitations of bounded rationality and information scarcity render the synoptic ideal unattainable, as they so often do, optimization tools no longer produce rational results. Instead, they risk producing what Herbert Simon called “approximate optimization,” in which the set of consequences and alternatives taken into account are artificially and arbitrarily pruned. That process produces an “optimal decision in the approximated world [that] is not necessarily even a good decision in the real world.”

Even at the EPA, which is frequently held up as the CBA gold standard, the practice of CBA too often becomes just such an exercise in “approximate optimization.” One problem is that they just don’t have the data to quantify all the benefits. In fact, when I took a look at the EPA’s major rulemakings over a 13-year period spanning most of the George W. Bush and Obama administrations, it turned out that the agency left significant categories of benefits unquantified 80 percent of the time. No surprise there when you consider that of the thousands of chemicals currently produced in our economy, only a small subset have undergone sufficient toxicity testing to support regulation. Indeed, of all the pollutants the EPA regulates, there’s really only one—particulate matter—the agency has decent data on. Without sufficient knowledge about the harms produced by pollutants, CBA will systematically ignore the benefits of regulation.

Another problem is that in the majority of cases, the EPA only analyzes the costs and benefits associated with one, two, or maybe three alternatives at most.

If you can’t quantify all the significant benefits, you can’t make a meaningful calculation of net benefits. And if you can’t calculate net benefits, or if you only analyze a couple of alternatives, you can’t find your way to the nirvana of net benefits maximization.

That leaves you with a very different tool from the bright shiny engine of welfare maximization CBA’s adherents have tried to sell us on. If important benefits are left out of the equation the vast majority of the time, then CBA operates at best as an informal screening tool, telling us, if we’re lucky, whether the benefits of a regulation in a rough sense exceed the costs. (When you’re not so lucky and your partial benefits estimate comes out lower than your cost estimate, it doesn’t tell you much of anything.)

Once demoted from a formal optimization tool to a rough screening tool, CBA loses its normative pedigree in welfare economics and joins the ranks of the other perhaps less theoretically beguiling but highly pragmatic cost screening tools that Congress has so often relied on in crafting our environmental statutes. These are the scrappy, street-smart tools of regulatory decision-making, like feasibility analysis, cost-effectiveness analysis, and multi-factor balancing—tools that arguably make up for in pure pragmatic effectiveness what they lack in theoretical elegance. Once your goal is no longer to reach the mythical state of economic efficiency, but rather to ensure that costs are not in some general sense unreasonable, these other tools may actually get you there more quickly, easily, and—dare I say—efficiently.

It’s not that these tools don’t consider costs and benefits. They do. They just do it in a way that doesn’t indulge the mythical fantasy of a one-size-fits-all tool for attaining the “synoptic ideal.” Instead, these tools are tailored to specific contexts and circumstances, and they consider costs and benefits in a way that recognizes and works within data gaps and limits on knowledge. They also avoid the messy and controversial business of trying to express intangible values—things like a long painful cancer death, a species pushed to extinction, or a polluted haze over the Grand Canyon—in terms of dollars and cents.

These more pragmatic decision tools are the bread and butter of actual agency decision making in environmental law because these are the tools that Congress has by and large directed agencies to use in the statutes that govern them. In fact, Congress has only rarely directed agencies to make decisions on the basis of CBA. And when it has, it has either made CBA optional or suggested CBA of the scrappy, informal variety rather than the formal, optimizing kind.

Indeed, in the one instance in which a federal appeals court actually tried to impose a formal optimizing CBA requirement on the EPA, Congress came back and explicitly overruled that court’s holding. After witnessing agency paralysis stymie its efforts to clean up our air and water, Congress wanted tools that worked—that delivered real results. And most of the time the tool that fit the bill was some variety of feasibility analysis, occasionally supplemented by cost-effectiveness analysis or multi-factor balancing.

And while it’s become fashionable to say that the Supreme Court now requires CBA as a matter of rational, non-arbitrary-and-capricious agency decision making, that claim is based on a misreading of the Court’s opinion in Michigan v. EPA—a misreading that’s grown into an urban legend of sorts. The Supreme Court did not say the agency had to do a formal cost-benefit analysis in that case, it said the EPA had to “consider costs.” As we’ve seen, there’s a big difference between the two. Agencies have lots of ways to consider costs, including the CBA alternatives listed above.

The Court made very clear that the choice among those different tools is left up to the agency. Writing for the majority, Justice Scalia explicitly recognized that, “It will be up to the agency to decide (as always, within the limits of reasonable interpretation) how to account for cost.” Moreover, the Court went out of its way to include a specific disclaimer of formal CBA: “We need not and do not hold that the law unambiguously required the Agency . . . to conduct a formal cost-benefit analysis in which each advantage and disadvantage is assigned a monetary value”—a point on which the four dissenting justices specifically agreed.

In short, the kind of formal, monetized CBA that’s become de rigueur in regulatory review doesn’t work very well in practice and is not, by and large, required by law. As the Biden administration sets to work “improving and modernizing” the process of regulatory review, they’d do well to heed the directive of Clinton’s EO 12866 to respect “the primacy of Federal agencies,” as well as the Supreme Court’s admonition that there is no one-size-fits-all tool for regulatory decision making. Agencies should decide how to most appropriately account for costs and benefits by choosing among the wide array of tools available. This choice should be tailored to the particular context in which the rulemaking arises, giving particular attention to the feasibility of quantifying and monetizing relevant costs and benefits, along with the agency’s statutory mandates.

Showing 2,829 results

Amy Sinden | October 19, 2021

The Shaky Legal and Policy Foundations of Cost-Benefit Orthodoxy in Environmental Law

In the actual work of crafting the regulatory safeguards that protect our environment and health, cost-benefit analysis has been largely ineffectual and irrelevant. Indeed, its ineffectiveness has been so profound as to prompt even its most ardent practitioners and proponents to question whether it has any impact on agency decisions at all. Meanwhile, it plays at best a minor role in the legal standards that actually govern agency decision-making. Despite all this, a certain cost-benefit orthodoxy has become remarkably entrenched in environmental policy circles. Especially in an era when so many progressive ideas are in ascendance, why does the idea of regulatory review based on cost-benefit analysis have such staying power?

James Goodwin | October 14, 2021

A Post-Neoliberal Regulatory Analysis for a Post-Neoliberal World

Over the last 40 years, the U.S. regulatory system has played an increasingly influential role in redefining our political and economic relationships in fundamentally neoliberal terms. A key but often overlooked institutional force behind this development is the peculiar form of cost-benefit analysis that now predominates in regulatory practice. Building a new regulatory system befitting our vision of a post-neoliberal America requires a formal rejection of prevailing cost-benefit analysis in favor of a radically different approach -- one that invites public participation, permits open and fair contestation of competing values at the heart of policy debates, and recognizes and honors our social interdependencies.

Jorge Roman-Romero, Melissa Lutrell | October 11, 2021

Modernizing Regulatory Review Beyond Cost-Benefit Analysis

Cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is inherently classist, racist, and ableist. Since these are foundational problems with CBA, and are not simply issues with its implementation, they can never be fixed by mere methodological improvements. Instead, the ongoing modernization of centralized regulatory analyses must focus on "moving beyond" CBA, and not on fixing it or improving it. Thus, in implementing President Biden's memorandum on Modernizing Regulatory Review (the Biden Memorandum), the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) should make explicit that regulatory review no longer requires CBA, even—as will be true in the typical case—when regulatory review does demand economic analysis as part of a holistic, multi-factor regulatory impact analysis.

Robin Kundis Craig | October 1, 2021

In Term-Opener, Justices Will Hear Mississippi’s Complaint that Tennessee Is Stealing Its Groundwater

Mississippi v. Tennessee is not only the Supreme Court’s first oral argument of the 2021-22 term, but it is also the first time that states have asked the court to weigh in on how they should share an interstate aquifer. The court’s decision could fundamentally restructure interstate groundwater law in the United States for decades -- or the case could be dismissed immediately on the grounds that Mississippi has failed to allege the proper cause of action.

Lisa Heinzerling | September 30, 2021

Climate Change, Racial Justice, and Cost-Benefit Analysis

President Biden has made climate change and racial justice central themes of his presidency. No doubt with these problems in mind, he has signaled a desire to rethink the process and substance of White House review of agencies' regulatory actions. On his very first day in office, Biden ordered administrative agencies to ensure that this review does not squelch regulatory initiatives nor brush aside "racial justice, environmental stewardship, human dignity, equity, and the interests of future generations." At the same time, however, Biden reaffirmed the "basic principles" of a Clinton-era executive order on White House regulatory review, subjecting agencies' major rules to a cost-benefit test. These twin inclinations -- toward acting boldly on climate change and racial justice, and toward judging regulation using cost-benefit analysis -- are trains racing toward each other on the same track. Two entrenched, perhaps even inherent, features of cost-benefit analysis practically ensure that the benefits of regulatory measures addressing climate change and racial injustice will be diminished and deformed in the process of "valuing" them.

Clarissa Libertelli | September 30, 2021

When It Rains, It Pours: Maryland Has a Growing Climate Justice Problem in Stormwater

Stormwater is growing problem in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, creating toxic runoff and flash flooding. The Maryland Department of Environment has the opportunity to protect people, but it hasn't yet.

Marcha Chaudry | September 29, 2021

Pushing for a Heat Stress Standard in Maryland and Beyond

A recent Maryland law requires the state's Commissioner of Labor and Industry, in consultation with its Occupational Safety and Health Advisory Board, to develop and adopt regulations that require employers to protect employees from heat-related illness caused by heat stress. Those standards are due by October 2022. The law also requires the state to hold four public meetings to collect input from residents. This month, the Maryland Occupational Safety and Health Division (MOSH) scheduled those meetings, and I testified at the September 20 session.

Joel A. Mintz | September 23, 2021

The Hill Op-ed: Biden’s Idealistic UN Message on Climate Change

Addresses by national leaders to the United Nations General Assembly are often broad expressions of lofty ideals, and President Joe Biden's speech Tuesday fell squarely into that category. It covered an extraordinary panoply of global challenges and policy concerns, including controlling the COVID-19 pandemic, rebuilding and strengthening global alliances and regional initiatives, curbing terrorism, protecting human rights (including the rights of women and workers) and lifting up democracy. Biden also committed the United States to advancing human dignity, combating corruption and seeking peace in areas of conflict around the world.

Clarissa Libertelli | September 22, 2021

Why the Attack on Voting Rights Threatens Our Regulatory System

When voters’ voices are suppressed, lawmakers and agency officials may be less responsive to their needs — and more likely to favor those of corporations and other special interests. Fortunately, last week Senate Democrats unveiled new voting rights legislation. Historically, voters overwhelmingly favor protective regulations, therefore more voting means a stronger regulatory system.