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 | | Alan J. Krupnick | | Senior Fellow and Director of Research | |
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| | RESEARCH TOPICS | | Air Quality, Environmental Regulation, Public Health, Research Tools, Water, Energy | PROFILE |
Krupnick's research focuses on analyzing environmental issues, in particular, the benefits, costs, and design of air pollution policies, both in the United States and in developing countries. His research also addresses the valuation of health and ecological improvements and, more recently, the ancillary benefits of climate policy and urban transportation and development problems.
Krupnick has served as a consultant to state governments, federal agencies, private corporations, the Canadian government, the European Union, the World Health Organization, and the World Bank. He cochaired an advisory committee that counseled the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on new ozone and particulate standards. Krupnick also served as senior economist on the President's Council of Economic Advisers, advising the Clinton administration on environmental and natural resource policy issues. He is a regular member of expert committees from the National Academy of Sciences and has served on a Royal Society of Canada committee analyzing ambient air quality standard setting in Canada.
Valuing Health Outcomes: An Assessment of Approaches; RFF co-hosted a conference (Feb. 13-14, 2003) examining the conceptual and empirical bases for alternative health-benefit measures, the ways in which such measures are used and could be used in policymaking, and whether the choice of measure would actually make a difference in policy outcomes. Conference Detail and Conference Links
| EDUCATION |
Ph.D. in economics, University of Maryland, 1980.
M.A. in economics, University of Maryland, 1974.
B.S. in finance, Pennsylvania State University, 1969.
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| NEWS | | Science Advisors Reject EPA Use of Controversial Cost-Benefit Method | | Tuesday, January 15, 2008 | | Risk Policy Report |
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