B/6025 B6025 B 6025 WEEK 5 ASSIGNMENT
- argosy-university / B 6025
- 01 May 2018
- Price: $30
- Other / Other
B 6025 WEEK 5 ASSIGNMENT
Assignment
1: Required Assignment 2—The Case For, or Against, New Orleans
Sometimes one’s choices may involve
catastrophic decisions and bear great risk and yet there can be no clear
answer. For example, if a person gets a divorce, shutters a plant, sells a
losing investment, or closes their business, will he or she be better off? The
following case incorporates nearly all of the material you have covered this
far and presents an example of one such choice where nearly all of the
alternatives have a significant downside risk.
Review the following information from the
article “A Cost-Benefit Analysis of the New Orleans Flood Protection System” by
Stéphane Hallegatte (2005):
·
Hallegatte,
an environmentalist, assigns a probability (p) of a Katrina-like hurricane of
1/130 in his cost-benefit analysis for flood protection. However, the levees
that protect New Orleans also put other regions at greater risk. You may assume
the frequency of other floods is greater than Katrina-like events (Vastag &
Rein, 2011).
·
The
new levees that were built in response to Katrina cost approximately fourteen
billion dollars (in 2010). This is in addition to the direct costs of Katrina
(eighty-one billion dollars in 2005).
·
50
percent of New Orleans is at or below sea level.
·
A 100-year event
means that there is a 63 percent chance that such an event will occur within a
100-year period.
·
The
following are the interested (anchored and/or biased) constituencies:
o
Residents
of New Orleans—both those that can move and those who cannot move
o
Residents
of the surrounding floodplains at risk from New Orleans levees
o
The
Mayor of New Orleans
o
The
federal government—specifically taxpayers and the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA)
Assume that the availability heuristics make
people more risk averse (populations drop, at least in the short term).
Consider how this would affect the local economy.
You are an analyst at FEMA and are in charge
of developing a recommendation for both the state and the local governments on
whether or not to redevelop New Orleans.
Write a report with your recommendation.
Address the following in your report:
Part
A
·
Analyze
the economics of New Orleans in light of the above parameters and develop your
own Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) for rebuilding.
·
Evaluate
the value of the CBA for each constituency and integrate these estimates into a
scenario model and/or decision tree. Analyze the results.
·
Clearly
each of these constituencies may both overlap and be prey to a variety of group
dynamics internally. For one of these options, discuss the decision pitfalls to
which they may be susceptible and make a recommendation on how to alleviate
these pressures.
·
Starting
with your CBA, estimate the relevant expected utility for the interested
constituencies.
Note: You need not have absolute
amounts but your relevant utilities should be proportional to one another.
Hint: If you assume that
your total CBA for New Orleans is fixed for each constituency (do not forget
the overlaps), then each constituency will have a piece of the utility pie.
Part
B
·
Make
a case for or against rebuilding the city of New Orleans. This should be an
executive summary; be concise and brief. Include exhibits.
·
Whether
you are for or against, discuss how social heuristics could be used to your
advantage, both ethically and unethically, in making your case. You may choose
to fill the role of one of the constituents, if you prefer.
Write an 8–12-page report in Word format.
Apply APA standards to citation of sources. Use proper spelling and grammar
throughout, and keep the text legible and balanced with visuals. Use the
following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M5_A1.doc.
By
the due date assigned,
deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.
Hallegatte,
S. (2006). A cost-benefit analysis of the New Orleans flood protection system.
Center for Environmental Sciences and Policy. Stanford University. Retrieved
from http://hal.cirad.fr/docs/00/16/46/28/PDF/Hallegatte_NewOrleans_CBA9.pdf
Vastag,
B., & Rein, L. (2011, May 11). In Louisiana, a choice between two floods.
The Washington Post. Retrieved from http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/in-louisiana-a-choice-between-two-
floods/2011/05/11/AFrjFotG_story.html