05329oam 2200661I 450 991081813970332120230617032804.01-280-68352-X97866136604661-136-52326-X1-936331-70-510.4324/9781936331703 (CKB)2670000000052364(EBL)592565(OCoLC)670412750(SSID)ssj0000415762(PQKBManifestationID)11269674(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000415762(PQKBWorkID)10418252(PQKB)11505011(MiAaPQ)EBC592565(Au-PeEL)EBL592565(CaPaEBR)ebr11315461(CaONFJC)MIL366046(OCoLC)1000432076(EXLCZ)99267000000005236420180706d2005 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrDetermining the economic value of water concepts and methods /Robert A. YoungWashington, D.C. :Resources for the Future,2005.1 online resource (377 p.)"An RFF Press book."1-891853-97-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Determining the Economic Valueof Water; Copyright; Contents; Preface; Part I: The Economic Value of Water: Concepts and Theory; Chapter 1. Water, Economics, and the Nature of Water Policy Issues; 1.1 Why Is Nonmarket Valuation Needed?; 1.2 The Role of Economic Valuation in Water Management; 1.3 The Nature of Economics and the Evaluation of Public Policies; Chapter 2. Conceptual Framework and Special Problems in Valuing Water; 2.1 Economic Value Versus Other Concepts of Value; 2.2 Economic Criteria for Resource Allocation and Valuation2.3 Economic Valuation in the Absence of Market Prices2.4 What Types of Water Values Can Be Identified?; 2.5 Looking Ahead: An Overview and Taxonomy of Water Valuation Methods; Chapter 3. Methods for Valuing Producers' Uses of Water; 3.1 Some Preliminaries; 3.2 Basic Welfare Concepts for Valuing Water in Producers' Good Uses; 3.3 Applied Valuation of Producers' Water Uses with Deductive Techniques; 3.4 The Basic Residual Method 1: The Product Exhaustion Theorem; 3.5 The Basic Residual Method 2: The Theory of Economic Rents; 3.6 Practical Issues in Implementing a Residual Analysis3.7 The Special Problem of Owned Inputs in Residual Imputations3.8 Extensions: The Change in Net Rents Method and Mathematical Programming Models; 3.9 Misconceived Water Valuation Methods with Versions of the Residual Method; 3.10 Concluding Evaluation of the Residual Method; 3.11 The Alternative Cost Method and Other Less-Used Deductive Techniques; 3.12 Valuing Producers' Water Using Inductive Techniques; 3.13 Concluding Comments on Valuation in Producers' Uses; Chapter 4. Applied Methods of Valuation of Water as Environmental Public Goods4.1 Revealed Preference Methods for Environmental Valuation4.2 Travel Cost Methods; 4.3 The Hedonic Property Value Method Once Again; 4.4 Defensive Behavior and Damage Cost Methods; 4.5 Expressed Preference Methods; 4.6 The Contingent Valuation Method; 4.7 Choice Modeling; 4.8 Concluding Comments on Expressed Preference Methods; 4.9 Benefit Transfer; 4.10 General Conclusions Regarding Valuation of Water-Related Public Goods; Part II: Applications of Valuation Methods; Chapter 5. Valuation of Water Used in Irrigated Crop Production; 5.1 Background5.2 Recapitulation of the Conceptual Framework for Valuing Irrigation Water5.3 The Water-Crop Production Function; 5.4 Inductive Techniques for Valuing Irrigation Water; 5.5 Other Inductive Methods Using Primary and Secondary Data for Valuing Irrigation Water; 5.6 Deductive Techniques for Valuing Irrigation Water: The Residual Method and Variations; 5.7 The Alternative Cost Method Applied to Valuing Irrigation Water; 5.8 Measuring Benefits of Improved Quality of Irrigation Water; 5.9 Concluding Remarks on Valuation of Irrigation Water; Chapter 6. Valuing Water Used by Industry6.1 Industrial Water UseWater provides benefits as a commodity for agriculture, industry, and households--and as a public good for scenic values, waste assimilation, wildlife habitats, and recreational use. However, even as the nature and needs of economies change, water continues to be allocated to other than high priority uses, water quality continues to decline, environmental uses get inadequate attention, and floods and droughts take an unnecessarily severe toll. One reason for this is that price signals that reflect scarcities of goods and thereby guide investments and resource allocation in the private sector aWater-supplyEconomic aspectsWater resources developmentEconomic aspectsWater-supplyEconomic aspects.Water resources developmentEconomic aspects.333.91Young Robert A(Robert Alton),1931-,874563MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910818139703321Determining the economic value of water3938428UNINA