Policy tradeoff under stated values
For arguments about whether a policy’s benefits exceed its costs given a value hierarchy. The rubric scores reasoning quality, not whether the value hierarchy is the right one.
When this rubric applies
The argument’s conclusion is "we should / should not do X" where X is a policy choice, and the disagreement turns on weighing benefits, costs, and unintended consequences against a stated set of priorities (efficiency, equity, liberty, security, growth, etc.).
Not appropriate when: the disagreement is about whether a policy is legally permitted (use STATUTORY-INTERP or CONSTITUTIONAL-STRUCTURE), or whether an empirical premise of the policy case is true (use SCIENTIFIC-CLAIM).
Criteria
1. Surfaces and weights the tradeoff honestly
weight 30%Does the argument acknowledge what is given up to get what it wants?
2. Engages opposing costs and benefits
weight 25%Does the argument take the strongest version of the other side’s case and respond to it?
3. Empirical grounding of stated effects
weight 25%When the argument predicts effects, are the predictions backed by evidence or asserted?
4. Consistency with stated values
weight 20%If the argument leans on a value (liberty, equity, efficiency), does it apply the value consistently across the case?