000 01547nam a2200265 4500
008 120320s1972 waua g s 000 0 eng
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
050 0 0 _aHC79.E5
_bE28
082 0 0 _a301.31'0973
_bHIT
100 _aHite, James C.,
245 0 4 _aThe Economics of Environmental Quality/
260 _aWashington:
_bAmerican Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research,
_c[1972]
300 _a113 p.:ill,
440 0 _aDomestic Affairs Studies,
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references.
520 _aThe authors use the term environmental quality to refer to the conditions associated with those resources that have not been assigned to the market for allocation. Though the focus is on air and water quality, an inclusion of conditions of crowding, visual stimuli, and odors within the same framework could be just as well. First, in an introduction to the nature of the problem, the subject is put in a perspective of time and place. Subsequent chapters provide an economic analysis of the problem, present discussions of environmental demand, and analyze such topics as the conflict between economic development and environmental quality, legal solutions to the problem, and the uses and effects of taxes and subsidies as means for ameliorating conflict over environmental quality.
590 _ane 28/03/2018
591 _aLoans
650 0 _aEnvironmental Policy.
650 0 _aEnvironmental Policy.
650 0 _aPollution.
700 1 _aMacaulay, Hugh H.
942 _2ddc
_cBOOK
949 _a301.31'0973 HIT
999 _c7649
_d7649