Publication | Closed Access
Parametric and Non‐Parametric Estimates of Willingness to Pay for Forest Recreation in Northern Ireland: A Discrete Choice Contingent Valuation Study with Follow‐Ups
27
Citations
47
References
2001
Year
Applied EconomicsNatural Resource ValuationLand UseEnvironmental Impact AssessmentForestryEnvironmental EconomicsEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesChoice ModelNorthern IrelandEconomic AnalysisRecreationWtp DistributionsNon‐parametric EstimatesStatisticsLand Use PlanningEconomicsPublic PolicyForest RecreationGeographySampling (Statistics)Forest TourismNatural Resource ManagementBusinessForest Resource ManagementNatural Resource EconomicsNonmarket ValuationEmpirical Evidence
In this study we show that forest areas contribute significantly to the estimated benefits from outdoor recreation in Northern Ireland. Secondly we provide empirical evidence of the gains in the statistical efficiency of both benefit and parameter estimates obtained by analysing follow‐up responses with Double Bounded interval data analysis. As these gains are considerable, it is clearly worth considering this method in CVM survey design even when moderately large sample sizes are used. Finally we demonstrate that estimates of means and medians of WTP distributions for access to forest recreation show plausible magnitude, are consistent with previous UK studies, and converge across parametric and non‐parametric methods of estimation.
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