Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same?
Nobel laureate and economist Simon Kuznets put forth the concept of gross domestic product (GDP) in response to a need for good data in public policy planning in the 1930s. Since then, policymakers have increasingly relied upon GDP and other national income indicators. If only one macro indica...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1522982023-03-05T15:39:35Z Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? Quah, Euston School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Economic development Nobel laureate and economist Simon Kuznets put forth the concept of gross domestic product (GDP) in response to a need for good data in public policy planning in the 1930s. Since then, policymakers have increasingly relied upon GDP and other national income indicators. If only one macro indicator is available in any given country, chances are the indicator is the country’s GDP. However, as Kuznets himself and other critics of GDP have pointed out, national income statistics are not ideal measures of welfare (Kuznets, 1934). Of the many criticisms, two of the more prominent are the lack of consideration of equity and the fact that these statistics only measure economic activity and do not account for non-economic costs of growth (Kuznets, 1962). 2022-01-11T06:07:18Z 2022-01-11T06:07:18Z 2017 Working Paper Quah, E. (2017). Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same?. Macroeconomic Review, volume XVI, issue 1, April 2017. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152298 https://www.mas.gov.sg/publications/economic-essays/2017/using-cost-benefit-analysis-in-developed-and-developing-countries-is-it-the-same https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152298 en Macroeconomic Review, volume XVI, issue 1, April 2017 © 2017 The Author. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Economic Policy Group, Monetary Authority of Singapore in Macroeconomic Review and is made available with permission of Monetary Authority of Singapore. application/pdf Monetary Authority of Singapore |
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Social sciences::Economic development Quah, Euston Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? |
description |
Nobel laureate and economist Simon Kuznets put
forth the concept of gross domestic product (GDP)
in response to a need for good data in public policy
planning in the 1930s. Since then, policymakers
have increasingly relied upon GDP and other
national income indicators. If only one macro
indicator is available in any given country, chances
are the indicator is the country’s GDP. However,
as Kuznets himself and other critics of GDP have
pointed out, national income statistics are not
ideal measures of welfare (Kuznets, 1934). Of the
many criticisms, two of the more prominent are
the lack of consideration of equity and the fact that
these statistics only measure economic activity
and do not account for non-economic costs of
growth (Kuznets, 1962). |
author2 |
School of Social Sciences |
author_facet |
School of Social Sciences Quah, Euston |
format |
Working Paper |
author |
Quah, Euston |
author_sort |
Quah, Euston |
title |
Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? |
title_short |
Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? |
title_full |
Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? |
title_fullStr |
Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? |
title_sort |
using cost-benefit analysis in developed and developing countries : is it the same? |
publisher |
Monetary Authority of Singapore |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://www.mas.gov.sg/publications/economic-essays/2017/using-cost-benefit-analysis-in-developed-and-developing-countries-is-it-the-same https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152298 |
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