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Measuring Environmental Values

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Related to supply and demand. WTP versus WTA. Types of value. ... Poorly understood biological and physical systems. Irreversibility. Case for Measuring Values ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Measuring Environmental Values


1
Measuring Environmental Values
  • David Letson
  • University of Miami

2
Main Points
  • Why value?
  • When markets do not exist.
  • Related to supply and demand.
  • WTP versus WTA.
  • Types of value.
  • Valuation pro and con.

3
Why do need to know economic values?
  • Current decisions.
  • Wisdom of past decisions.
  • Implied values may be ignored.
  • Natural resources scarcity.
  • Opportunity cost.

4
Environmental goods and services often not traded
in markets.
  • In markets we have clear information.
  • Prices
  • Incomes
  • Goods and services
  • In markets, most goods/services are rival and
    excludable.

5
How much better off?
  • Suppose a change in policy or technology that
    improves water quality.
  • How to value changes in resource quality or
    quantity?
  • Economic surplus consumers producers
  • Value is change in economic surplus following
    change in water quality

6
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7
Reading the Fine Print...
  • Marshallian versus Hicksian demand.
  • Public intervention.
  • Imperfect competition.
  • Market failures.

8
Economic Analysis
  • Cost-benefit analysis
  • Identify and quantifying project impacts
  • Monetization
  • Damage assessment
  • Economic impact analysis
  • Cost-effectiveness analysis

9
Example Atlantic Billfish
  • Bycatch releases improve stock abundance.
  • Raises likelihood of catch to recreationists.
  • Increased recreational trips, value.
  • Value of policy Compare
  • increased recreational surplus
  • lost revenue to commercial fishers

10
Perspective Matters!
  • Willingness to pay (WTP) vs. willingness to
    accept (WTA)
  • Property rights.
  • Uniqueness.
  • Specifically
  • WTP to secure a benefit
  • WTP to prevent a loss
  • WTA to forego a benefit and
  • WTA to tolerate a loss.

11
Economic values are not intrinsic.
  • Economic values stem from human preferences.
  • Intrinsic values reside in something.
  • Not observable.
  • Not measurable.

12
Total economic value use values non-use
values option values
  • Use values
  • direct
  • indirect
  • Option value WTP to secure a potential, future
    use.

13
Total economic value, continued.
  • Non-use (passive use) value, also known as
    existence value.
  • Knowledge that a resource exists in a given
    state.
  • Stewardship or
  • Concern/sympathy/respect for welfare of
    non-humans.

14
Complications
  • Values occurring far into the future.
  • Moral obligations
  • Uncertainty
  • Future resource needs and availability
  • Poorly understood biological and physical systems
  • Irreversibility

15
Case for Measuring Values
  • Scarcity implies tradeoffs.
  • Structured framework
  • Available for public scrutiny
  • Evaluates uncertainty
  • Characterizes values we cant quantify
  • Total benefits as a step toward who benefits.
  • Need to impute value when markets dont reveal it
    directly.
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