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Stated Preference 2010

Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

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Page 1: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Stated Preference

2010

Page 2: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Stated

• Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something.

• You can lie.

Page 3: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Passive use

• I love wolves existence but I don’t do anything at all with them– I don’t contribute to wolf organizations– I don’t go to Yellowstone to see them– I just love them while sitting alone in my

armchair• Travel cost gives a value for me of zero for

wolves.

Page 4: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Option

• One day I might want to go see wolves in Yellowstone.

• I am willing to pay for the option to see them.

• An option is the right and not the obligation.– A theatre ticket is the right to see the play, but

the author will not come with a gun to force you to see it.

Page 5: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Money

• First talk to them about money and how it could be used for other projects.

Page 6: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Background

• Give the subjects some context for the project that will be proposed.

• Then tell respondent about wolves and their role in ecosystem.– Show them pictures of wolves, yellowstone,

and excess herbivory

Page 7: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

So tell about a project

• Describe a specific project– Allow them to run free in Yellowstone– Need money to pay for dead sheep

Page 8: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

And a specific payment method

• A surcharge on sales tax for meat• An income tax surcharge• A surcharge on sales tax for environment

texts

Page 9: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Reasons to Vote for and Against

• Remind the subject that there are good reasons to vote for or against the project.

• Trying not to convey the attitude that all good people are for a meat tax.

• (A good reason to have disinterested people, not the investigator, ask the questions.)

Page 10: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

The Question

• Open ended:– How much would you be willing to pay to

make yellowstone a wolf haven?• Referendum:

– Would vote for a surcharge on your income tax of $X to support the wolf indemnification program so that Yellowstone can be a wolf haven?• Choose x to be different numbers for different

people to trace a demand curve.

Page 11: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

The debrief

• Ask about– Income– Education– Family status– Etc

• Use to show how characteristics affect choice.– Would wonder about survey if wolves were an

inferior good and men loved them more than women

Page 12: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Lies

• You want more wolves in Yellowstone and are truly willing to pay $50.

• You know that the WTP measure computed from the survey will determine the number of wolves.

• What number do you give as an answer to how much will you pay?

• Do you say yes to the referendum at $60?

Page 13: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

How to analyze discrete choice

• Yes or No votes to save the wolves• Take bart, bus or drive• etc.

Page 14: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Cumulative and Density: What percent above?

Page 15: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Random Utility model

• U = a E + b I– E # of wolves– I Income a and b are parameters

• Two cases, with and without improvement• U1 = aE1 + b I

• U2 = aE2 + b (I-P) – P is payment

Page 16: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Pick the best

• Says yes to referendum if– U2 > U1

– a(E2-E1) –bP > 0

• If people are a little different – ei is the little bit of difference in wolf liking– U2 = aE2 + b(I-P) +ei

– U2 > U1 means• a(E2-E1) –bP + ei > 0

Page 17: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Who says yes

– a(E2-E1) –bP + ei > 0

– All those who have e’s• ei > -a (E2 – E1) + bP

• So for each P we will have some fraction that says Yes and some that says NO.

• We choose a and b to make the predicted fractions as close as possible to the actual fractions.

Page 18: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Wolf value

• Now we have the parameters a and b.• U = a E + b I

– So 1 wolf increase U by a– $1 increase U by b– U constant is 1 wolf up and $a/b down– Value of a wolf is a/b!

Page 19: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Conjoint Analysis

• Two or more variants on the project.– Garden with 30% native plants– Garden with 100% native plants– Garden with no native plants.

• Attributes– Intensity of color display– Water use– Cost

Page 20: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Alternatives have different attributes

• No native– Intense color, low cost, high water

• 20%– intense color, high cost, medium water

• All native– Dull, low cost, low water

Page 21: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Utility depends on attribs

• Ui= a * colori + b * costi + c * wateri

– Where i = all native, non-native, 20% native– Utility of the alternative depends upon the

quantity of the attributes and their valuation, a, b,c.

• We ask people to choose an alternative and use RUM to find the a, b, c that get us predictions close to the fraction that actually chose the alternatives

Page 22: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Advantage

• Learn the value of the underlying attributes.– Does the saved water drive peoples use of

native landscape?– Are people color freaks?– Is it all about the pocketbook?

Page 23: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Criticism of SP in general

• Background.– The Exxon Valdez spawned a huge litigation

battle. Exxon realized that contingent valuation had the potential to make every spill a company threatening situation. Arm chair environmentalists would have to be paid.

– Economics profession was heavily involved in either defending or attacking.

– Michael Hanneman and Richard Carson were on the side of making the companies pay.

Page 24: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Hypothetical bias

• You don’t really have to pay with a CV study.– There are studies where both CV and

revealed preference have been done and CV doesn’t generally overstate the revealed preference answer.

– e.g. Do a cv study on the value of hunting licenses. Then send the licenses out with a check and say return one.

Page 25: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Scope

• If you would pay $20 to save one lake, would you pay $20,000 to save 1,000 lakes?

• $26 to clean up local water and $68 to clean up all water?

• Are these internally inconsistent?• Probably not. Willing to pay less for each

additional lake, WTP more for local than far away.

Page 26: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

Experimental

• Pay people to taste SOA. It is bitter.• Give people $10. If a majority says yes,

every one of them gives up $5 and gets a piece of sports memorabilia. Compare to a CV experiment, hypothetical.

• External Validity —do these experiments tell us anything about the world at large or only students and sports memorabilia fans?

Page 27: Stated Preference 2010. Stated Means you ask somebody about something rather than watch them do something. You can lie

A Pitch for Marketing

• I have a new pizza. Should I be marketing it which costs $25 million or should I forget it?

• Marketing uses techniques like those above—surveys and experiments to learn about demand.

• Unlike our environment business, they learn what true demand is when they put the pizza on the market.