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Welfare economics Outline Expressing changes in human well-being (utility) in monetary terms Deciding between monetary measures that are equally theoretically.

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Presentation on theme: "Welfare economics Outline Expressing changes in human well-being (utility) in monetary terms Deciding between monetary measures that are equally theoretically."— Presentation transcript:

1 Welfare economics Outline Expressing changes in human well-being (utility) in monetary terms Deciding between monetary measures that are equally theoretically sound but differ empirically Estimating these measures empirically

2 Readings Hartwick & Olewiler, Ch. 1 (esp. pp. 7-19) Lesser et al., pp. 282-304

3 Main points Economists value changes in the quantity or quality of goods by estimating monetary measures that have the same impact on utility There are two theoretically sound measures, which depend on the reference utility level: compensation (utility without the change), and equivalence (utility with the change) –These can be related to ideas of willingness to pay (WTP) and willingness to accept (WTA) These measures can differ a lot for public goods, and for private goods they can differ from ordinary consumer surplus –Property rights provide guidance on which to use For unpriced goods, there are two broad categories of methods for estimating these measures: stated-preference methods and revealed- preference methods

4 Basic concept of valuation A change in environmental quality (E 0  E 1 ) can affect an individual’s utility (U 0  U 1 ) –E.g., if environmental quality worsens (E 0 > E 1 ), then utility falls (U 0 > U 1 )

5 Basic concept of valuation A change in environmental quality (E 0  E 1 ) can affect an individual’s utility (U 0  U 1 ) –E.g., if environmental quality worsens (E 0 > E 1 ), then utility falls (U 0 > U 1 ) Economists ask: what monetary change would have the same impact on utility?

6 Basic concept of valuation A change in environmental quality (E 0  E 1 ) can affect an individual’s utility (U 0  U 1 ) –E.g., if environmental quality worsens (E 0 > E 1 ), then utility falls (U 0 > U 1 ) Economists ask: what monetary change would have the same impact on utility? –Compensation—Assume the negative change occurs. How much money must the individual receive to maintain utility at U 0 ?

7 Basic concept of valuation A change in environmental quality (E 0  E 1 ) can affect an individual’s utility (U 0  U 1 ) –E.g., if environmental quality worsens (E 0 > E 1 ), then utility falls (U 0 > U 1 ) Economists ask: what monetary change would have the same impact on utility? –Compensation—Assume the negative change occurs. How much money must the individual receive to maintain utility at U 0 ? –Equivalence—Assume the change does not occur. How much money must the individual sacrifice to reduce utility to U 1 ?

8 Willingness to accept and pay For a worsening of environmental quality: –Compensation: what is the minimum monetary amount the individual is willing to accept (WTA) to allow the deterioration to occur? –Equivalence: what is the maximum monetary amount the individual is willing to pay (WTP) to prevent the deterioration from occurring?

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12 In sum: for any environmental change (deterioration or improvement), there are two equally valid conceptual measures of the value of the change (compensation and equivalence)

13 Issues Are they the same? If not, which one should we use? How can we estimate them?

14 Issues Are they the same? –No If not, which one should we use? –Depends on property rights How can we estimate them? –Two classes of methods: stated-preference (“what people say”), revealed-preference (“what people do”)

15 Example: priced good Suppose an improved water supply system is introduced to a village, thus causing the price of water to decline What is the benefit to households, expressed in monetary terms?

16 Utility maximization Households’ utility is a function of consumption of two goods, water (C 1 ) and food (C 2 ):U(C 1,C 2 )

17 Utility maximization Households’ utility is a function of consumption of two goods, water (C 1 ) and food (C 2 ):U(C 1,C 2 ) Households spend all their income on the two goods: P 1 C 1 + C 2 = Y 0 –Price of water = P 1, price of food = 1

18 Utility maximization Households’ utility is a function of consumption of two goods, water (C 1 ) and food (C 2 ):U(C 1,C 2 ) Households spend all their income on the two goods: P 1 C 1 + C 2 = Y 0 –Price of water = P 1, price of food = 1 How do households determine how much of each good to consume?

19 Utility maximization Households’ utility is a function of consumption of two goods, water (C 1 ) and food (C 2 ):U(C 1,C 2 ) Households spend all their income on the two goods: P 1 C 1 + C 2 = Y 0 –Price of water = P 1, price of food = 1 How do households determine how much of each good to consume? –Maximize utility, subject to budget constraint

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21 Impact of price fall Price of water falls, from P 1 to P 1  –Price of food stays the same, equal to 1

22 Impact of price fall Price of water falls, from P 1 to P 1  –Price of food stays the same, equal to 1 What is the impact on amount of water consumed? on utility?

23 Impact of price fall Price of water falls, from P 1 to P 1  –Price of food stays the same, equal to 1 What is the impact on amount of water consumed? on utility? –Water consumption rises from C 1 to C 1  –Utility rises from U 0 to U 1 –Equilibrium changes from a to b

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25 Compensating measure What is the maximum the household would be willing to pay (WTP) to obtain the lower water price?

26 Compensating measure What is the maximum the household would be willing to pay (WTP) to obtain the lower water price? –Y 0 – Y 1 : this decrease in income would reduce utility to U 0, even though the household pays the lower price

27 Equivalent measure What is the minimum the household would be willing to accept (WTA) to forgo the lower water price?

28 Equivalent measure What is the minimum the household would be willing to accept (WTA) to forgo the lower water price? –Y 2 – Y 0 : this increase in income would raise utility to U 0, even though the household pays the higher price

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30 WTA vs. WTP There is no geometric reason why Y 2 – Y 0 = Y 0 – Y 1 In fact: Y 2 – Y 0 > Y 0 – Y 1

31 WTA vs. WTP There is no geometric reason why Y 2 – Y 0 = Y 0 – Y 1 In fact: Y 2 – Y 0 > Y 0 – Y 1 For an improvement: WTA to forgo > WTP to obtain

32 WTA vs. WTP There is no geometric reason why Y 2 – Y 0 = Y 0 – Y 1 In fact: Y 2 – Y 0 > Y 0 – Y 1 For an improvement: WTA to forgo > WTP to obtain For a deterioration: WTA to incur > WTP to avoid

33 Magnitude of discrepancy Is the good private or public?

34 Magnitude of discrepancy Is the good private or public? Characteristics of public goods 1.Nonexclusive: no one can be excluded from “using” the good 2.Nonrival: one person’s “use” does not reduce the amount available for anyone

35 Magnitude of discrepancy Is the good private or public? Characteristics of public goods 1.Nonexclusive: no one can be excluded from “using” the good 2.Nonrival: one person’s “use” does not reduce the amount available for anyone Public goods are usually unpriced –Environmental quality is usually a public good

36 Private (priced, market) goods –Discrepancy is typically small –A few %

37 Private (priced, market) goods –Discrepancy is typically small –A few % Public (unpriced, nonmarket) goods –Discrepancy is often large –Many times

38 Choosing between WTP and WTA What is allocation of property rights?

39 Choosing between WTP and WTA What is allocation of property rights? –If households are entitled to improved water service, WTA is appropriate measure They should be paid to give it up

40 Choosing between WTP and WTA What is allocation of property rights? –If households are entitled to improved water service, WTA is appropriate measure They should be paid to give it up –If not, choose WTP Households have no right to the service They should pay to get it

41 Example: ANWR If ANWR belongs to public, then appropriate question is, “How much would you be WTA to allow oil drilling?” If ANWR belongs to oil companies, then appropriate question is, “How much would you be WTP to prevent oil drilling?”

42 Marshallian consumer surplus If we know (or can estimate) the market, or Marshallian, demand curve for water, then we might calculate the benefit as the increase in consumer surplus –Area under the demand curve and above price –Difference between the amount consumers are willing to pay and the amount they actually pay

43 Marshallian consumer surplus If we know (or can estimate) the market, or Marshallian, demand curve for water, then we might calculate the benefit as the increase in consumer surplus (MCS) –Area under the demand curve and above price –Difference between the amount consumers are willing to pay and the amount they actually pay How is this linked to the change in utility?

44 Only approximately: WTA > MCS > WTP

45 Valuing unpriced goods Two broad categories of approaches:

46 Valuing unpriced goods Two broad categories of approaches: 1.Stated preference methods: ask people to state how much they are WTP to obtain a hypothetical environmental improvement or how much they are WTA to forgo it

47 Valuing unpriced goods Two broad categories of approaches: 1.Stated preference methods: ask people to state how much they are WTP to obtain a hypothetical environmental improvement or how much they are WTA to forgo it 2.Revealed preference methods: infer WTP, WTA from people’s actual behavior, in particular their expenditure on priced goods that are substitutes or complements for the unpriced good E.g., incurring travel costs to visit a park, or paying more for a house because it’s in a less polluted area


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