Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools
Log in
Sections
You are here: Home Teaching Survey of Environmental and Natural Resource Economics Papers CE and CV Ladenburg and Olsen, 2008

Ladenburg and Olsen, 2008

In this paper, we test whether preferences and willingness-to-pay estimates obtained in a Choice Experiment study are susceptible to starting point bias as is often the case in Dichotomous Choice Contingent Valuation studies. On the basis of a multinomial probit model, we find that preferences are indeed susceptible to starting point bias. In a split-sample design our results suggest that varying the price levels displayed in a so-called Instructional Choice Set presented prior to the actual preference eliciting choice sets, significantly impacts respondents’ preferences and willingness-to-pay for protecting Danish nature areas from new motorway development. In particular, our results show that the bias is gender-specific. Only female respondents are significantly affected. Results further reveal that the impact of the starting point bias decays as respondents evaluate more and more choice sets. This supports the Discovered Preference Hypothesis, and on the basis of this we suggest a number of ways to potentially mitigate the starting point bias.

LadenburgOlsen2008.pdf — PDF document, 200 kB (205747 bytes)

Document Actions