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Economic Valuation

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Adam Smith (1723-1790) Value in use versus value in exchange. Actual versus natural price ... 1823) simplified and consolidated Smith s labour theory of value ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Economic Valuation


1
Economic Valuation
  • Dr. Richard S.J. Tol
  • Michael Otto Professor of Sustainability and
    Global Change
  • Depts. GeoSciences Economics

2
Contact
  • Room 008, ground floor, Bundesstrasse 55, 20146
    Hamburg Pavillion behind Geomatikum
  • Tel 040 42838 7007/8
  • Fax 040 42838 7009
  • Email tol _at_ dkrz.de
  • http// www.uni-hamburg.de / Wiss / FB / 15 /
    Sustainability
  • The sheets are there as well

3
Economic Valuation, lecture 1
  • Course aims and set-up
  • Price and Value
  • Total Economic Value
  • Property Rights

4
The Course
  • The theory and practice of the monetary valuation
    of environmental goods and services not traded on
    markets
  • Prior knowledge micro, calculus
  • Note This is serious
  • Reader

5
The Lectures
  • 12.4 Introduction The Nature of Value (Tol)
  • 19.4 Demand theory (Tol)
  • 26.4 Welfare (Tol)
  • 3.5 Contingent valuation I (Rehdanz)
  • 10.5 Contingent valuation II (Rehdanz)
  • 17.5 Free
  • 24.5 Production function methods (Rehdanz)
  • 31.5 Hedonic pricing (Tol)
  • 7.6 Econometric methods (Rehdanz)
  • 14.6 Contingent choice (Tol)
  • 21.6 Benefit transfer (Zandersen)
  • 28.6 Ecological functions (Tol)
  • 5.7 Rucksacks and footprints (Tol)

6
Price Value Greeks
  • Xenophon (427-355 BC)
  • the greater the number of superfluous dishes
    set before man, the sooner a feeling of repletion
    comes over him
  • a flute is wealth to one who is competent to
    play it, but to an incompetent person it is no
    better than useless stones ... unless he sells
    it
  • wealth is that from which a man can derive
    profit
  • even land is not wealth if is makes us starve
    instead of supporting us

7
Price Value Greeks -2
  • Do you mean that the same things are both
    beautiful and ugly?
  • Of course and both good and bad. For what is
    good for hunger is often bad for fever and what
    is good for fever is bad for hunger what is
    beautiful for running is often ugly for wrestling
    and what is beautiful for wrestling ugly for
    running. For all things are good and beautiful in
    relation to those purposes for which they are
    well adapted ...

8
Price Value Greeks -3
  • Protagoras (480-411 BC)
  • man is the measure of all things
  • Aristotle (384-322 BC)
  • Ethics rather than markets
  • Incremental analysis
  • Value in use versus value in exchange
  • Trade only if surpluses exist
  • Trade reflects subjective values
  • Trade must be mutually beneficial
  • what is rare is a greater good than what is
    plentiful

9
Price Value Medieval
  • St. Augustine (354-407) confirmed the subjective
    nature of value
  • There is ... a different value set upon each
    thing proportionate to its use ... Very
    frequently a horse is held more dear than a
    slave, or a jewel more precious than a maid.
    Since every man has the power of forming his own
    mind as he wishes, there is very little agreement
    between the choice of a man who through necessity
    stands in real need of an object and of one who
    hankers after a thing merely for pleasure

10
Price Value Medieval -2
  • Albertus Magnus (1206-1280) introduced (labour)
    costs goods are measured in relation to labour
    value is determined by supply in relation to
    what is needed
  • Gerald Odonis (1290-1349) introduced scarce and
    differentiated labour
  • Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) reaffirmed value in
    use versus value in exchange introduced demand
    and needs value is determined by demand in
    relation to what is available

11
Price Value Medieval -3
  • Henry of Freimar (1245-1340) was the first to
    look at aggregate (average) demands and scarcity,
    again without separating the two
  • Jean Buridan (1295-1385) introduced effective
    demand (minus endowments), differentiating
    between consumers wants (luxuries, necessities),
    but recognizing that they operate in the same
    market
  • Odonis focussed on scarcity and quality of human
    skills, including relative efficiencies and costs
    of education

12
Price Value Medieval -4
  • John Crell (1590-1633) combined the supply theory
    of value (Odonis) with the demand theory of value
    (Buridan), or in Scholastic terms, scarcity in
    the face of need (raritas) with need in the face
    of scarcity (indigentia) but did not realise
    that the two were merely components of a single
    principle the labour theory and the utility
    theory of value continued to exist for a while
    longer

13
Price Value Early
  • Sir William Petty (1623-1687) tried to unify land
    and labour in one value system recognised that
    money is the standard of value, medium of
    exchange, and store of value
  • Richard Cantillon (1680-1734) distinguished
    between actual and intrinsic (equilibrium) prices
  • Physiocrats (18th century) claimed that only
    agriculture can create surplus a supply theory
    of value, with land rather than labour

14
Price Value Classical
  • Adam Smith (1723-1790)
  • Value in use versus value in exchange
  • Actual versus natural price
  • Labour theory of value The value of any
    commodity ... not to use ... but to exchange ..
    is equal to the quantity of labour which it
    enables him to purchase or command. Labour is the
    real measure of the exchangeable value of all
    commodities
  • For all Smiths genius, this is a reversal.

15
Price Value Classical -2
  • David Ricardo (1772-1823) simplified and
    consolidated Smiths labour theory of value
  • Thomas Malthus (1766-1834) argued for on
    supply-and-demand value
  • Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) introduced utility as
    a measure of a persons happiness and social
    welfare as the sum of individual utility
  • William Nassau Senior (1790-1864) recognised that
    value depends on (1) relative utility, (2)
    relative scarcity, and (3) exchangeability

16
Price Value Neo-Classical
  • William Stanley Jevons (1835-1882)
  • Distinction between total and marginal utility
  • Nature of marginal utility
  • Equimarginal utility in decision and exchange
  • Alfred Marshall (1842-1924)
  • Theory of demand elasticity, substitution,
    input factors
  • Consumer surplus

17
Neo-Classical Theory
  • Value lost its central place, replaced by welfare
  • Price just is it is determined by the equation
    of demand and supply
  • Having a bit more brings just the same additional
    welfare as does reducing income by the price
  • Selling a bit more brings just the same revenue
    as it costs to produce a bit more
  • Price is marginal value, value is the area under
    the demand curve, value equals utility
  • Note that utility is relative, changes only

18
Current Thinking
  • Price is determined by the equation of demand and
    supply
  • Having a bit more brings just the same additional
    well-being as does reducing income by the price
  • Selling a bit more brings just the same revenue
    as it costs to produce a bit more
  • Price is marginal value, value is the area under
    the demand curve, value equals utility
  • Note that utility is relative, changes only

19
Recent developments
  • Total economic value Use value Intrinsic
    value
  • Use value Actual use value Option value
    Quasi-option value
  • Option value Value in potential use by self
    Value in potential use by others Value in
    potential use by future individuals
  • Quasi-option value Value of avoiding
    irreversibilities in the light of expected future
    knowledge
  • Intrinsic value Existence value

20
Existence Value
  • Existence value is unrelated to any actual or
    potential use
  • Existence value may be related to sympathy, or
    stewardship as such, existence values do not fit
    into neo-classical economics
  • Existence value may also be related to spiritual
    consumption, and then it does fit
  • Existence value is not right-based, as rights are
    absolute, and values relatives

21
Grizzlies and Bighorns
22
Property Rights
  • Property is
  • The right to use
  • The right to exclude
  • The right to destroy
  • Property rights are often attenuated
  • Property rights can be
  • Private
  • Common
  • Public
  • Government
  • Absent (open access)
  • Environmental resources are seldom privately owned

23
This course will ...
  • Present techniques to measure the value, in the
    neo-classical sense, of commodities that are not
    traded in markets
  • Present neo-classical techniques to measure
    existence values
  • Discuss alternative techniques
  • Show empirical examples
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