Valuing Clean Air: The EPA and the Economics of Environmental Protection

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The passage of the Clean Air Act and the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1970 marked a sweeping transformation in American politics. In a few short years, the environmental movement pushed Republican and Democratic elected officials to articulate a right to clean air as part of a bevy of new federal guarantees. Charged with delivering on those promises, the EPA represented a bold assertion that the federal government had a responsibility to protect the environment, the authority to command private business to reduce their pollution, and the capacity to dictate how they did so.

In
Valuing Clean Air, Charles Halvorson examines how the environmental concern that propelled the Clean Air Act and the EPA coincided with economic convulsions that shook the liberal state to its core. Business groups, public interest organizations, think tanks, and a host of other actors, including Ralph Nader, wasted little time after the EPA's creation in identifying and trying to pull the new levers of power. As powerful businesses pressed to roll back regulations, elected officials from both political parties questioned whether the nation could keep its environmental promises. In response, the EPA's staff and leadership practiced a politics of the possible, adopting a monetized approach to environmental value that shielded the agency's rulemaking but sat at odds with environmentalist notions of natural rights and contributed to the elevation of economics as the language and logic of policy. As Halvorson demonstrates, environmental protection came to serve as a central battleground
in larger debates over markets, government, and public welfare.

For anyone who has wondered where cap and trade came from and how environmental activists came to discuss wetlands protection, air pollution, and fracking in the language of cost-benefit analysis,
Valuing Clean Air provides an insightful look at a half-century of the making of US environmental policy.

Author(s): Charles Halvorson
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 311
City: New York

Cover
Valuing Clean Air
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: Save EPA
1. The Costs of Pollution
2. The Doer: The EPA and the Power in Implementation
3. A Balancing Act: Regulatory Review
4. Put the Profit Motive to Work: Regulatory Reform
5. Are You Tough Enough? Deregulation
6. Markets for Bads: Cap-​and-​Trade and the New Environmentalism
Epilogue: The EPA and a Changing Climate
Notes
Bibliography
Index