A general population sample of 135 Australian respondents completed one of four contingent valuation surveys that asked them to value health benefits either in the absence of an explicit reference good or in the presence of one of three different forms of reference good. Results suggest that respondents have a 'ball-park' figure that is then challenged by the reference good. For values that appear far lower than, or similar to, this 'ball-park' figure, the reference good has little quantitative effect, but qualitatively appears to help respondents in their confidence in this value being their actual WTP. The implications for CV research in health care are outlined in the discussion
Abstract: Contingent valuation (CV) is a method to appraise the benefits a society receives from pub...
Contingent valuation (CV) has become one of the most widely used non-market valuation techniques. CV...
Whilst contingent valuation is increasingly used in economics to value benefits, questions remain co...
A general population sample of 104 Australian respondents completed an interviewer-administered cont...
Contingent valuation (CV) has been argued to have theoretical advantages over other approaches for b...
The use of willingness to pay to value the benefits of health care is increasing. Much of this work ...
The use of willingness to pay to value the benefits of health care is increasing. Much of this work ...
Contingent valuation (CV) is a survey-based method frequently used for placing monetary values on en...
Contingent valuation (CV) and its two arms, or deadly weapons, willingness to pay (WTP) and willingn...
A general population sample of Australian respondents completed a contingent valuation (CV) survey t...
Contingent valuation (CV) has been criticised for being too hypothetical, with expressed values bear...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
The use of a contingent valuation (CV) method is controversial among economists because it is based ...
Abstract The gap between willingness-to-pay (WTP) and willingness-to-accept (WTA) benefit values typ...
Contingent valuation (CV) is a widely used but controversial survey-based technique for estimating t...
Abstract: Contingent valuation (CV) is a method to appraise the benefits a society receives from pub...
Contingent valuation (CV) has become one of the most widely used non-market valuation techniques. CV...
Whilst contingent valuation is increasingly used in economics to value benefits, questions remain co...
A general population sample of 104 Australian respondents completed an interviewer-administered cont...
Contingent valuation (CV) has been argued to have theoretical advantages over other approaches for b...
The use of willingness to pay to value the benefits of health care is increasing. Much of this work ...
The use of willingness to pay to value the benefits of health care is increasing. Much of this work ...
Contingent valuation (CV) is a survey-based method frequently used for placing monetary values on en...
Contingent valuation (CV) and its two arms, or deadly weapons, willingness to pay (WTP) and willingn...
A general population sample of Australian respondents completed a contingent valuation (CV) survey t...
Contingent valuation (CV) has been criticised for being too hypothetical, with expressed values bear...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
The use of a contingent valuation (CV) method is controversial among economists because it is based ...
Abstract The gap between willingness-to-pay (WTP) and willingness-to-accept (WTA) benefit values typ...
Contingent valuation (CV) is a widely used but controversial survey-based technique for estimating t...
Abstract: Contingent valuation (CV) is a method to appraise the benefits a society receives from pub...
Contingent valuation (CV) has become one of the most widely used non-market valuation techniques. CV...
Whilst contingent valuation is increasingly used in economics to value benefits, questions remain co...