Legal obstacles for contingent valuation methods in environmental litigation
Fecha
2017Autor
Israel, Brian D.
Martin, Jean
Smith Fayne, Kelly
Daniel, Lauren
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Resumen
Contingent valuation surveys, and other stated preference methods, are
sometimes used by economists to solicit opinions from the public regarding the monetary value respondents place on the existence of natural
resources, independent of the use of those resources. For example, economists may attempt to use surveys to measure how much the respondent
values a particular natural resource, such as a bird species or habitat, even
if he or she never uses or sees that resource.
For decades, economists, government officials, and others have debated
whether such survey methods can accurately measure non-use values in
natural resource damage (“NRD”) cases. A central premise of this debate
is the oft-repeated notion that contingent valuation and other similar
methods are allowed by the NRD regulations and accepted by the courts.2
As we demonstrate below, this premise is inaccurate for several reasons.
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