The results in this paper are relevant for the application of valuation studies in cost-benefit analysis in the presence of the willingness to pay - willingness to accept gap. We consider a consumer who makes choices based on choice preferences exhibiting reference-dependence and loss aversion. Choice preferences are related to underlying hedonic preferences through the marginal rates of substitution (MRS) at the reference. Our issue is the identification of hedonic preferences relevant to welfare economic analysis. We show that the hedonic MRS is identified from reference-dependent choices if loss aversion exhibits a certain symmetry. Moreover, we show that this symmetry is rational in the sense that it leads to maximal expected hedonic ut...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
Our starting point is the following simple but potentially underappreciated observation: When assess...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We develop a model that fleshes out, extends, and modifies existing models of reference dependent p...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
Several experimental studies have reported that an otherwise robust regularity-the disparity between...
The two primary approaches to estimate marginal willingness-to-pay (MWTP) for differentiated goods a...
In rational choice theory, individuals are assumed always to choose the option that will provide the...
The importance of willingness to pay (WTP) and its counterpart willingness to accept (WTA), in the e...
The two primary approaches to estimate marginal willingness-to-pay (MWTP) are hedonic (Rosen, 1974) ...
The two primary approaches to estimate marginal willingness-to-pay (MWTP) for differentiated goods a...
We consider binary choices on the trade-off between money and travel time, and formulate a model of ...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
Our starting point is the following simple but potentially underappreciated observation: When assess...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We develop a model that fleshes out, extends, and modifies existing models of reference dependent p...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
Several experimental studies have reported that an otherwise robust regularity-the disparity between...
The two primary approaches to estimate marginal willingness-to-pay (MWTP) for differentiated goods a...
In rational choice theory, individuals are assumed always to choose the option that will provide the...
The importance of willingness to pay (WTP) and its counterpart willingness to accept (WTA), in the e...
The two primary approaches to estimate marginal willingness-to-pay (MWTP) are hedonic (Rosen, 1974) ...
The two primary approaches to estimate marginal willingness-to-pay (MWTP) for differentiated goods a...
We consider binary choices on the trade-off between money and travel time, and formulate a model of ...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
We formulate a model of reference-dependent preferences based on the marginal rate of substitution a...
Our starting point is the following simple but potentially underappreciated observation: When assess...