Also, do you have any recommendations for estimating the disvalue of a policy that curtails people’s freedom (eg. by increasing the price of a good they value)?
There are standard approaches for valuing the loss of consumer surplus from price changes. Traditionally, moving money from one entity to another is just a transfer, not a cost, but there is a deadweight loss associated with price changes, and we measure that as a cost. But you have to have an estimate for how many trades will not happen as a result of the price change.
There are no existing metrics for valuing loss of freedom in DALY terms. You’d basically have to do a proper survey, using similar methodology to the one that generates the DALY losses of various health states.
Also, do you have any recommendations for estimating the disvalue of a policy that curtails people’s freedom (eg. by increasing the price of a good they value)?
There are standard approaches for valuing the loss of consumer surplus from price changes. Traditionally, moving money from one entity to another is just a transfer, not a cost, but there is a deadweight loss associated with price changes, and we measure that as a cost. But you have to have an estimate for how many trades will not happen as a result of the price change.
There are no existing metrics for valuing loss of freedom in DALY terms. You’d basically have to do a proper survey, using similar methodology to the one that generates the DALY losses of various health states.
Thank you!