Respondent-reported driving and time costs are used to represent the individual trip price for a solution to a calibration problem in the travel cost method (Randall 1994). After considering recreationists perceptions of driving costs and travel time, models based on individual driving costs and stated costs of travel time are compared to standard-type specifications with wagebased time costs. Respondent-reported driving costs appear to be a working tool for calibrating the welfare measures. The willingness to pay to reduce travel time was logically related to respondent and trip characteristics and had reasonable effects on benefit estimates.vo
Abstract: This paper explores the proper valuation of time when estimating the demand for recreation...
The paper tests ‘twoalternative specifications for the opportunity cost of time in travel cost model...
Using count data models that account for zero-truncation, overdispersion, and endogenous stratificat...
As the price of recreational visits is unobservable and commonly represented by researcher-assigned ...
The importance of accounting for a respondent’s travel time in recreation demand models is well esta...
The importance of accounting for a respondent’s travel time in recreation demand models is well esta...
Existing recreation demand models have paid much attention to the heterogeneous nature of the opport...
Open Access article funded by Economic and Social Research CouncilThe opportunity Value of Travel Ti...
AbstractThe opportunity Value of Travel Time (VTT) is one of the most important elements of the tota...
Policy decisions concerning options for the recreational use of natural resources typically call for...
Randall (1994) argued that the Travel Cost Method, TCM, cannot do what it is supposed to do ¾ genera...
The paper tests two alternative specifications for the opportunity cost of time in travel cost model...
The opportunity Value of Travel Time (VTT) is one of the most important elements of the total cost o...
In this paper we use the results of a recent on-site recreation survey to know whether it matters to...
Randall (1994) argued that the Travel Cost Method (TCM) cannot generate monetary measures of recreat...
Abstract: This paper explores the proper valuation of time when estimating the demand for recreation...
The paper tests ‘twoalternative specifications for the opportunity cost of time in travel cost model...
Using count data models that account for zero-truncation, overdispersion, and endogenous stratificat...
As the price of recreational visits is unobservable and commonly represented by researcher-assigned ...
The importance of accounting for a respondent’s travel time in recreation demand models is well esta...
The importance of accounting for a respondent’s travel time in recreation demand models is well esta...
Existing recreation demand models have paid much attention to the heterogeneous nature of the opport...
Open Access article funded by Economic and Social Research CouncilThe opportunity Value of Travel Ti...
AbstractThe opportunity Value of Travel Time (VTT) is one of the most important elements of the tota...
Policy decisions concerning options for the recreational use of natural resources typically call for...
Randall (1994) argued that the Travel Cost Method, TCM, cannot do what it is supposed to do ¾ genera...
The paper tests two alternative specifications for the opportunity cost of time in travel cost model...
The opportunity Value of Travel Time (VTT) is one of the most important elements of the total cost o...
In this paper we use the results of a recent on-site recreation survey to know whether it matters to...
Randall (1994) argued that the Travel Cost Method (TCM) cannot generate monetary measures of recreat...
Abstract: This paper explores the proper valuation of time when estimating the demand for recreation...
The paper tests ‘twoalternative specifications for the opportunity cost of time in travel cost model...
Using count data models that account for zero-truncation, overdispersion, and endogenous stratificat...