Economics of the Endangered Species Act
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- Published by American Economic Association in Journal of Economic Perspectives
- Vol. 12 (3), 3-20
- https://doi.org/10.1257/jep.12.3.3
Abstract
The Endangered Species Act of 1973 is one of our most far-reaching and controversial environmental laws. While the benefits of protecting endangered species accrue to the entire nation, a significant fraction of the costs are borne by the private landowners who shelter about 90 percent of the nearly 1,000 listed species. The pressure to know whether the social benefits of preservation exceed the private costs has thrust economics into ongoing reauthorization debate. This paper examines how economists can help better the odds that when society imposes and bears costs to protect endangered species, it will be more likely to succeed.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Testing the Internal Consistency of Contingent Valuation SurveysJournal of Environmental Economics and Management, 1996
- Strengthening the Use of Science In Achieving the Goals of the Endangered Species Act: An Assessment By the Ecological Society of AmericaEcological Applications, 1996
- Valuing Biodiversity for Use in Pharmaceutical ResearchJournal of Political Economy, 1996
- Patterns of Behavior in Endangered Species PreservationLand Economics, 1996
- Extinction Rates: Modern extinctions in the kilo-death rangeCurrent Biology, 1995
- Allocating Scarce Resources for Endangered Species RecoveryJournal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1995
- Values and Perceptions of InvertebratesConservation Biology, 1993
- Status and Prospects for Success of the Endangered Species Act: A Look at Recovery PlansScience, 1993
- Extinctions: A Paleontological PerspectiveScience, 1991
- Environmental Regulation and U.S. Economic GrowthThe RAND Journal of Economics, 1990