XIII Lecture 2020
XIII Lecture 2020
XIII Lecture 2020
Dr. G. Liobikienė
Content:
• Other methods for the evaluation of
environmental value (damage Cost Avoided,
Replacement Cost, and Substitute Cost
Methods; usage of hypothetical market).
• External cost evaluation methods;
• Political analysis;
Damage Cost Avoided, Replacement Cost, and Substitute Cost
Methods
• Methods that estimate values of natural resources based on either the
costs of avoiding damages due to lost services, the cost of replacing
ecosystem services, or the cost of providing substitute services.
• Do not provide strict measures of economic values, which are based on
peoples’ willingness to pay for a product or service.
• Assume that the costs of avoiding damages or replacing ecosystems or
their services provide useful estimates of the value of these ecosystems or
services.
• This is based on the assumption that, if people incur costs to avoid
damages caused by lost ecosystem services, or to replace the services of
ecosystems, then those services must be worth at least what people paid
to replace them.
• Thus, the methods are most appropriately applied in cases where damage
avoidance or replacement expenditures have actually been, or will actually
be, made.
• Example: Valuing improved water quality by measuring the cost of
controlling effluent emissions.
• Example: Valuing erosion protection services of a forest or wetland by
measuring the cost of removing eroded sediment from downstream areas.
• If the two substitutes provide the same good, not
market goods’ value is saved cost using substitute.
• In all cases avoidance encompasses expenditure of
substitution process.
For the replacement or substitute cost method need to identify the least
costly alternative means of providing the service(s).
• Calculate the cost of the substitute or replacement service(s).
• Finally, public demand for this alternative must be established. This
requires gathering evidence that the public would be willing to accept
the substitute or replacement service(s) in place of the ecosystem
service(s).
Usage of hypothetical market evaluating
environmental values
• Many natural resources are not traded in markets
and are not closely related to any marketed
goods.
• Surveys can be used to ask people directly what
they are willing to pay, based on a hypothetical
scenario: –=> contingent valuation
• Alternatively, people can be asked to make
tradeoffs among different alternatives, from
which their willingness to pay can be estimated: –
=> choice experiments
• It can assess both use and non-use environmental
values.
Contingent Valuation Method (CVM)
• CVM method involves directly asking people, in a survey,
how much they would be willing to pay for specific
environmental services.
• “Contingent” because people are asked to state their
willingness to pay, contingent on a specific hypothetical
scenario and description of the environmental service.
• The fact that the contingent valuation method is based on
asking people questions, as opposed to observing their
actual behavior, is the source of enormous controversy.
• Results are highly sensitive to what people believe they are
being asked to value, as well as the context that is
described in the survey.
• Survey must be properly designed, pre-tested, and
implemented.
• CVM can be conducted as in-person interviews, telephone
interviews or mail surveys.
• A wide variety of CVM studies have been carried out on a
wide range of environmental and nature issues: - preserving
biodiversity; - (water and nature) recreation; - water supply
and supply of sewerage; - increased access to natural
habitats; - etc.
cost
Willingness to
accept
Willingness to
pay
Emissions
• W –well-being function, M0-current income, M1- willingness to pay for environmental goods, M2-willigness to
accept compensation of environmental damage (deterioration).
Disadvantages of EXTERNE:
- Evaluation is very difficult and takes a lot of time;
- Results are vague;
- There can be missed important data which is not
evaluated due to the many difficulties;
- It is impossible to evaluate synergetic effect and
reflect real environmental issues.
Policy analysis
The growth in income and employment in a green
economy is driven by investments. For the investments to
be catalysed and leveraged, public expenditure, policy
reforms and regulation changes are needed. As a result,
methodologies and models must support the
policymaking process, allowing to quantitatively project
and evaluate trends:
• 1) identify entry points for interventions and set targets
(policy formulation, stage)
• 2) assess the potential impact across sectors and the
effectiveness in solving stated problems (or exploiting
opportunities) of selected interventions (policy
assessment, stage)
• 3) and monitor and evaluate the impact of the
interventions chosen against a baseline scenario
The main forms of policy analysis:
• Retrospective policy analysis involves the
production and transformation of information
after policies have been implemented. Policy
analysis is often retrospective and not well suited
to helping policy makers decide what to do;
• In contrast prospective policy analysis seeks to
assist in formulating responses to challenging
public policy questions. It involves the
production and transformation of information
before policy actions are initiated and
implemented.
The process of policy analysis
I Problem structuring
Problem structuring, which is a continuously recurring phase of policy inquiry in with
analysts search among competing problem formulations of different stakeholders, is no
doubt the most important activity performed by policy analysts.
It is important because policy analysts seem to fail more often because they solve the
wrong problem than because the get the wrong solution to the right problem.
Aims:
• Forecasts provide information about future changes in policies and their
consequences.
• Forecasting permits great control through understanding past policies and
their consequences, implying that the future is determined by the past.
• Forecasting also enables us to shape the future in an active manner,
irrespective of what has happened in the past
Forms of forecasting:
- Projection- a forecast based on the extrapolation of current and historical
trends into the future;
- Prediction – a forecast based on explicit theoretical assumptions;
- Conjecture – a forecast based on informed or expert judgment about
future states of society.
Limitations of forecasting:
• Forecast accuracy – recent simple forecasting models have
had huge errors in recent years in econometric
forecasting.
• Comparative yield – both simple and complex theoretical
models have been no more accurate than simple
extrapolative models and informed expert judgment.
• Context (institutional – nonprofit more accurate than
business and government; temporal – long term less
accurate than short run, historical – modern complexity
reduces accuracy).
Steps of forecasting:
• 1) identify object what we want to forecast;
• 2) To decide how to forecast, to gather the main data;
• 3) To choose the technique of forecasting and forecast.
Techniques of forecasting
III Policy recommendation
• The policy analytic procedure of recommendation
enables analysts to produce information about the
likelihood that future courses of action will result
in consequences that are valuable to some
individual, group or society as a whole
• The procedure of recommendation involves the
transformation of information about policy futures
into information about policy actions that will
result in valued outcomes.
• Policy recommendations are normative
(advocative) rather than empirical (descriptive) or
evaluative.
Criteria for policy recommendation:
• Effectiveness – does a given alternative result in the achievement of a
valued outcome (technical rationality)
• Efficiency – the amount of effort needed to produce a given level of
effectiveness (economic rationality)
• Adequacy – the extent to which any given level of effectiveness
satisfies the needs, values, or opportunities that gave rise to the
problem.
• Equity – the distribution of effects and effort among different groups
in the society (legal and social rationality)
• Responsiveness – satisfies the needs, preferences, or values of
particular groups.
• Appropriateness – the value or worth of a program’s objectives and
the tenability of assumptions underlying these objectives.
Approaches of recommendation
• Public versus private choice;
• Supply and demand;
• Benefit cost analysis.
IV Policy monitoring
• In order to help the implementation process, monitoring
helps to assess degrees of compliance, discover unintended
consequences of policies and programmers, identify
implementational obstacles and constraints, and locate
sources of responsibility for departures from policies.
• Policy monitoring is a process by which stakeholders follow
and assess policies to ensure they are developed, endorsed,
enacted, and implemented as intended. Policy monitoring
involves:
• (1) appraising the policy environment,
• (2) gauging the level and quality of stakeholder engagement,
• (3) documenting the progress of policy development and the
legislative endorsement of policy,
• (4) putting policies into practice through financing and
implementation planning,
• (5) evaluating outcomes of implementation.
The main functions of monitoring:
– Conformity (whether it confirm defined standards
and procedures);
– Audit (whether goods and services reached the
target group);
– Accounting;
– Interpretation.
– Graphical;
– Tables presentation;
– Indices;
– Break time series analysis (evaluating before and after
political changes);
– Control series analysis (when we want to evaluate
whether the implemented policy have impact
included and the values of control);
– Regression breaks analysis (using when we want to
evaluate and compare impact of policy
implementation in two or more groups).
VI policy evaluation
• The policy evaluation answer to the question: What is the value
of implemented policy.