Polluted Logic: How EPA's ozone standard illustrates the flaws of cost-benefit analysis

Download the PDF

Polluted Logic tracks EPA's recent revision of the national standard for ozone and shows how the use of cost-benefit analysis in the rulemaking has been useless to policy makers and has only complicated the debate over whether to tighten the standard.

As the paper discusses, EPA's ozone standard serves as a case example of some of the big problems with cost-benefit analysis in regulatory decision making:

  • Cost-benefit analysis is problematic for health, environment, civil rights, and safety rulemakings because of the magnitude of intangible and invaluable benefits;
  • Cost-benefit analysis often runs counter to congressional intent expressed in federal law; and
  • Cost-benefit analysis allows the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs to manipulate regulations to serve an intended ideological agenda.

 

Download the paper here: Polluted Logic: How EPA's ozone standard illustrates the flaws of cost-benefit analysis in regulatory decision making.

back to Blog