Publication | Closed Access
Experimental Results on Expressed Certainty and Hypothetical Bias in Contingent Valuation
188
Citations
16
References
1998
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingConsumer ResearchHypothetical BiasRevealed PreferenceContingent Valuation MethodChoice ModelExperimental Decision MakingBiasManagementExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisDecision TheoryConsumer ChoiceEconomicsPublic PolicyMarketingFinanceExpressed CertaintyBehavioral EconomicsReal ChoicesBusinessContingent ValuationNonmarket ValuationMicroeconomics
Use of the contingent valuation method is controversial among economists because it is based on hypothetical rather than real choices. Previous experiments have suggested that the commonly used dichotomous choice contingent valuation method leads to hypothetical bias, i.e., overestimates the real willingness to pay. We carried out an experiment to compare the dichotomous choice contingent valuation method with real purchase decisions for a consumer good. We confirm previous findings that hypothetical yes responses overestimate real purchase decisions, but we cannot reject the null hypothesis that definitely sure yes responses correspond to real purchase decisions.
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