CODE OF
FEDERAL REGULATIONS
TITLE 1--GENERAL
PROVISIONS
CHAPTER
III--ADMINISTRATIVE CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED
STATES
PART
305--RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE
CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED STATES
1 C.F.R. s 305.79-4
s 305.79-4 Public
Disclosure Concerning the use of Cost-Benefit and
Similar Analyses in Regulation (Recommendation No.
79-4).
(a) Federal agencies must
frequently weigh competing health, safety, resource
management, environmental, economic, and other
societal interests when seeking to achieve a
prescribed statutory objective. Wise
decision-making presupposes that the potential
benefits and costs of the actions under
consideration will be identified, will be
quantified if feasible, and will be appraised in
relation to each other. To give structure to the
exercise of this responsibility, agencies sometimes
use "cost-benefit" or similar analytic approaches
to organize available information to determine the
consequences of possible courses of action in terms
of their costs, risks and benefits. Such techniques
seek to display the projected net effects of
alternative courses of action and, when properly
used, can assist the decision-maker in deciding
which of the alternatives is most likely to produce
a desired result.
(b) The following
recommendation seeks to promote openness in the
decision- making process, to ensure that agencies'
analytic methods are sound and that their
assumptions are known, so as to enhance public
confidence in the soundness of conclusions finally
reached. The recommendation is not intended to
promote or to discourage the use of any single kind
of analysis as a framework for agency
decision-making, since this choice is normally a
matter of agency discretion. The choice of analytic
technique may depend on several factors, including
the technical complexity of the problem, the
magnitude of the impacts, the time frame for agency
action, and the extent to which quantification is
possible for the specific costs and benefits to be
considered. Any analysis, of course, should be
viewed as an aid to rational decision-making, and
not as an end in itself. The intent of the
recommendation will be served by giving the public
adequate advance notice of the agency's proposed
methodologies, either generically or by means of
special notice in a particular proceeding.
Recommendation
1. Agencies, as general
policy though not necessarily by binding rule,
should adopt the practice of addressing, in their
public notices of particular proceedings in which
cost-benefit or similar analyses are to be used,
the following points:
a. Any statutory or other
legal requirements pertaining to or affecting the
agency's conduct of cost-benefit or similar
analyses in the proceeding.
b. The particular analytic
technique to be followed by the agency (e.g., cost-
benefit analysis, cost-effectiveness analysis,
qualitative or non-numerative balancing), with a
description of the method, including an
identification of any analytic models preliminarily
determined to be used.
c. Any factual assumptions
or preliminary findings of the agency to be
utilized in the analyses.
d. The agency's techniques
for assessing and revealing uncertainties in its
quantitative estimates, and making explicit the
range of error associated with particular
quantitative estimates.
e. The agency's methods
for evaluating intangible costs and benefits, for
discounting future costs and benefits, and for
taking account of distributional effects arising
under the selected methodology, to the extent such
issues are involved in the analyses.
f. The stages of the
proceeding at which the cost-benefit or similar
analyses will be conducted and the results
considered.
g. The extent and nature
of public participation in the design, conduct, and
evaluation of the cost-benefit or similar
analyses.
h. The extent and manner
in which the public is to be accorded access to
assumptions and information used in the
analyses.
A statement of the weight
given the cost-benefit or similar analyses, and a
description of any revisions of assumptions or
preliminary findings, should be included in the
final agency determination and made available to
the public.
2. Where a pattern of
recurring decisional problems exists for which a
particular analytic technique is appropriate, the
agency should consider adopting a generic
regulation or policy statement describing the use
of that technique with respect to those problems.
Agencies that have varied statutory functions may
suitably formulate separate regulations or policy
statements for different areas of statutory
responsibility. Generic regulations or policy
statements so adopted may permit the use of
different techniques on an ad hoc basis where the
agency determines that to be necessary. Any such
regulations or policy statements should address the
points listed in paragraph 1.
[44 FR 38826, July 3,
1979; 44 FR 47755, Aug. 14, 1979]
: 5 U.S.C. 591-596.
SOURCE: 38 FR 19782, July
23, 1973; 57 FR 61760, 61768, Dec. 29, 1992, unless
otherwise noted.
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