Abstract: In this paper we experimentally investigate the disparity between willingness-to-accept (WTA) and willingness-to-pay (WTP) for risky lotteries. The direction of the income effect is reversed by endowing subjects with the highest price of a lottery when asking the WTP question. Our results show that the income effect is too small to be the only source of the disparity. Since the disparity concentrates on a subsample of subjects, parametric and nonparametric tests of the WTA-WTP ratio may lead to contradictory results. The disparity is significantly reduced when background risk is introduced. That is, putting subjects always into a risky position could improve the contingent valuation method which is often concerned with the assessm...
Large disparities between willingness to accept (WTA) and willingness to pay (WTP) based values of s...
Lottery choice experiments with monetary payoffs have a long tradition for eliciting risk preference...
We propose a new explanation for the WTP/WTA disparity in experiments and surveys. Uncertainty, irre...
Former studies have shown that people tend to give buying prices that are lower than selling prices....
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
We experimentally investigate the Willingness To Pay (WTP)- Willingness To Accept (WTA) gap in the e...
Four studies demonstrated robust within- and between-subject differences in willing-ness-to-pay (WTP...
Many empirical studies have discovered large discrepancies between willingness to pay (WTP) and will...
This paper examines the three major explanations for the disparity between willingness-to-pay (WTP) ...
This study reports a new meta-analysis of papers that elicit willingness-to-pay (WTP) and willingnes...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We report on experiments to replicate Plott and Zeiler's (2005) findings that the WTP-WTA gap disapp...
"Willingness to pay" (WTP) and "willingness to accept" (WTA) measures of welfare change typically di...
The risk preferences of three-person groups and individuals are compared using a non-sequential repe...
Large disparities between willingness to accept (WTA) and willingness to pay (WTP) based values of s...
Lottery choice experiments with monetary payoffs have a long tradition for eliciting risk preference...
We propose a new explanation for the WTP/WTA disparity in experiments and surveys. Uncertainty, irre...
Former studies have shown that people tend to give buying prices that are lower than selling prices....
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
We experimentally investigate the Willingness To Pay (WTP)- Willingness To Accept (WTA) gap in the e...
Four studies demonstrated robust within- and between-subject differences in willing-ness-to-pay (WTP...
Many empirical studies have discovered large discrepancies between willingness to pay (WTP) and will...
This paper examines the three major explanations for the disparity between willingness-to-pay (WTP) ...
This study reports a new meta-analysis of papers that elicit willingness-to-pay (WTP) and willingnes...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We report on experiments to replicate Plott and Zeiler's (2005) findings that the WTP-WTA gap disapp...
"Willingness to pay" (WTP) and "willingness to accept" (WTA) measures of welfare change typically di...
The risk preferences of three-person groups and individuals are compared using a non-sequential repe...
Large disparities between willingness to accept (WTA) and willingness to pay (WTP) based values of s...
Lottery choice experiments with monetary payoffs have a long tradition for eliciting risk preference...
We propose a new explanation for the WTP/WTA disparity in experiments and surveys. Uncertainty, irre...