Essays on the Temporal Insensitivity, Optimal Bid Design and Generalized Estimation Models in the Contingent Valuation Study


Book Description

Abstract: This dissertation aims to provide answers to some of issues in dichotomous choice contingent valuation: the temporal structure of willingness to pay, practical guideline for survey design and generalized estimation method. The first essay proposes the temporal willingness to pay (TWTP) as an alternative definition of the present value of willingness to pay. In the survey of contingent valuation, a respondent compares TWTP with the present value of randomly assigned cost. TWTP enables the test for consistency of respondent's valuation with respect to payment schemes. Using a sequential test, the insensitivity of TWTP is tested on the data of oyster reef restoration programs in the Chesapeake Bay. The test result shows that TWTP is insensitive to the offered payment schedule or on the length of the stream of benefits of the project, which implies consistent willingness to pay for the environmental project. However, discount rates estimated from the data vary significantly across project lengths and time span between offered payment schedules. The second essay suggests a practical alternative design named a uniform design, to existing optimal or robust bid designs in contingent valuation. The uniform design draws cost assigned to respondent from a predetermined uniform distribution. Analytics and simulations show that the uniform design has lower bound of efficiency at 84 percent of D-optimum. Simulations demonstrate that the uniform design outperforms optimal designs when initial information is poor and outperforms robust designs when true values of parameters are known. The third essay challenges the theoretical and technical background of the simple logit model. Standard logit model in contingent valuation assumes i.i.d error distribution between initial and proposed states. Relaxing the restrictive assumption in the simple logit model requires a generalized estimation technique that utilizes a Gumbel mixed model. Estimation results show that correlation between two states is usually minimal, but homoskedastic errors are rejected in many cases. Heteroskedasticity or correlation provides willingness to pay estimate different from estimate of the simple logit, thus different policy implication in benefit-cost analysis.




Contingent Valuation


Book Description

This major reference work the first of its kind provides a comprehensive and authoritative introduction to the large and growing literature on contingent valuation. It includes entries on over 7,500 contingent valuation papers and studies from over 130 countries covering both the published and grey literatures. This book provides an interpretive historical account of the development of contingent valuation, the most commonly used approach to placing a value on goods not normally sold in the marketplace. The major fields catalogued here include culture, the environment, and health application. This bibliography is an ideal starting point for researchers wanting to find other studies that have valued goods or used techniques similar to those they are interested in. For those wanting to conduct meta analyses, the book will serve as an invaluable guide to source material. For those wanting to conduct meta analyses, the book will serve as an invaluable guide to source material. In addition to the print edition we offer access, for purchasers of the book, to a website providing the contents of as a searchable Word document and in a variety of standard bibliographic database forms. Contingent Valuation is an indispensable reference source for researchers, scholars and policymakers concerned with survey approaches to the problem of environmental valuation.







Measuring Nonuse Damages Using Contingent Valuation


Book Description

This second edition of Measuring Nonuse Damages Using Conjoint Valuation is essentially a reprint of a 1992 monograph that has been in steady demand since its original appearance. The RTI Press edition, which is intended to meet continued inquiries and requests for the monograph, contains a Foreword and a Preface to the second edition that put the original work into historical perspective. These studies of ways to value stated preferences, as applied then to the Exxon Valdez oil spill, continue to be a timely and still-rigorous examination of such methods; even with the passage of time and statistical advances from the past two decades, the conclusions and insights as to whether and how these techniques might still be employed in valuing use or nonuse losses from similar events remain valid.







Valuing Environmental Goods


Book Description

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Using Surveys to Value Public Goods


Book Description

Provides decision makers, policy analysts, and social scientists, with a detailed discussion of a new techniques for the valuation of goods not traded in prevate markets.




Handbook of Environmental Economics


Book Description

The Handbook of Environmental Economics focuses on the economics of environmental externalities and environmental public goods. Volume I examines environmental degradation and policy responses from a microeconomic, institutional standpoint. Its perspective is dynamic, including a consideration of the dynamics of natural systems, and global, with attention paid to issues in both rich and poor nations. In addition to chapters on well-established topics such as the theory and practice of pollution regulation, it includes chapters on new areas of environmental economics research related to common property management regimes; population and poverty; mechanism design; political economy of regulation; experimental evaluations of policy instruments; and technological change.




Handbook on Contingent Valuation


Book Description

The Handbook on Contingent Valuation is unique in that it focuses on contingent valuation as a method for evaluating environmental change. It examines econometric issues, conceptual underpinnings, implementation issues as well as alternatives to contingent valuation. Anna Alberini and James Kahn have compiled a comprehensive and original reference volume containing invaluable case studies that demonstrate the implementation of contingent valuation in a wide variety of applications. Chapters include those on the history of contingent valuation, a practical guide to its implementation, the use of experimental approaches, an ecological economics perspective on contingent valuation and approaches for developing nations.




Cost-Benefit Analysis and the Environment Recent Developments


Book Description

An in-depth assessment of the most recent conceptual and methodological developments in cost-benefit analysis and the environment.