We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WTA)–willingness to pay (WTP) gap. Specifically, we conduct a standard WTA–WTP economic experiment to replicate the gap and include in it five additional instruments to try to follow the psychological processes producing it. These instruments are designed to measure five psychological constructs we consider especially relevant: (1) attitudes, (2) feelings, (3) familiarity with the target good, (4) risk attitudes, and (5) personality. Our results provide important new insights into the psychological foundations of the WTA–WTP disparity, which can be used to organize some major previous results and cast serious doubts on the claim that the gap mi...
We report on experiments to replicate Plott and Zeiler's (2005) findings that the WTP-WTA gap disapp...
People report much larger willingness to accept (WTA) than willingness to pay (WTP) under a broad ra...
This paper tests whether individual perceptions of markets as good or bad for a public good is corre...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We propose a new explanation for the WTP/WTA disparity in experiments and surveys. Uncertainty, irre...
Based on a survey among more than 5,000 German households and a single-binary choice experiment in ...
We report on experiments to replicate Plott and Zeiler's (2005) findings that the WTP-WTA gap disapp...
People report much larger willingness to accept (WTA) than willingness to pay (WTP) under a broad ra...
This paper tests whether individual perceptions of markets as good or bad for a public good is corre...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We present an experiment designed to study the psychological basis for the willingness to accept (WT...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We propose a new explanation for the WTP/WTA disparity in experiments and surveys. Uncertainty, irre...
Based on a survey among more than 5,000 German households and a single-binary choice experiment in ...
We report on experiments to replicate Plott and Zeiler's (2005) findings that the WTP-WTA gap disapp...
People report much larger willingness to accept (WTA) than willingness to pay (WTP) under a broad ra...
This paper tests whether individual perceptions of markets as good or bad for a public good is corre...