Publication | Closed Access
Measuring the Value of a Public Good: An Empirical Comparison of Elicitation Procedures
313
Citations
17
References
1987
Year
Public GoodElicitation ProceduresBehavioral Decision MakingConsumer ResearchResearch EvaluationBuying BehaviorProgram EvaluationEmpirical ComparisonManagementExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisEvaluation MethodologyValue CreationConsumer ChoiceEconomicsPublic PolicyMarginal UtilityPublic Good (Economics)Market BehaviorMarketingHypothetical Elicitation ProceduresBehavioral EconomicsHypothetical MeasurementsBusinessNonmarket ValuationDecision Science
The problems associated with accurately measuring the value of a public good in an applied setting are considered. The values obtained from hypothetical elicitation procedures are compared and contrasted with those obtained in a marketplace. When hypothetical measurements are elicited in the field, buying-selling discrepancies similar to those predicted by psychological models of behavior are observed. However, when the market-like elicitation process is repeated, values are more consistent with diminishing marginal utility. The authors cannot reject the hypothesis that these individuals exhibit loss- aversion behavior. The marketplace, however, is a strong disciplinarian of limiting this type of behavior. Copyright 1987 by American Economic Association.
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