Abstract

This Handbook of Well-Being and Public Policy (henceforth “the Handbook”) is a voluminous–almost 1,000 pages–collection of review essays and original contributions pertaining to the following general question: How to evaluate policy in light of individual well-being? The common starting point is the recently burgeoning public debate on the need to develop alternative methods for public policy assessment that would go beyond the most common tools of economic analysis, such as the GDP or cost-b...

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