We provide controlled laboratory evidence that open-ended hypothetical surveys do not always accurately elicit real economic commitments from individuals. We argue that they can provide biased measures of true values, where the latter are elicited using incentive-compatible institutions. We also evaluate if it is the hypothetical-payment aspect of these surveys which results in these biases or the lack of explicitly incentive-compatible provision rules. We conclude that it is the former. We are unable to devise a hypothetical survey that uses an incentive-compatible provision rule to elicit valuations that are demonstrably truthful.
In a paper published in the Journal of Political Economy, Cummings et al. experimentally compare hyp...
Experimental data comparing hypothetical and real dichotomous choice responses for two different goo...
Significant difference between response to real and hypothetical valuation questions is often referr...
This study reports the results of experiments designed to elicit, within a controlled laboratory env...
Although the contingent valuation method has been widely used to value a diverse array of nonmarket ...
Questionnaire surveys are an established economic research method for eliciting consumers' surplus v...
Recent attempts to test the validity of the contingent valuation method have relied on laboratory-ty...
Concern exists that hypothetical willingness to pay questions overestimate real willingness to pay. ...
Significant difference between response to real and hypothetical valuation questions is often referr...
Hypothetical, real, and predicted real willingness to pay in open-ended surveys: experimental result
Individuals are widely believed to overstate their economic valuation of a good by a factor of two o...
Significant difference between response to real and hypothetical valuation questions is often referr...
WP 1996-16 November 1996Past research suggests that contingent valuation overstates demand for publi...
Contingent valuation (CV) is a surveying technique used to estimate the willingness to pay (WTP) by ...
Data set and codebook variables for paper Incentives in Surveys, accepted for publication in the ...
In a paper published in the Journal of Political Economy, Cummings et al. experimentally compare hyp...
Experimental data comparing hypothetical and real dichotomous choice responses for two different goo...
Significant difference between response to real and hypothetical valuation questions is often referr...
This study reports the results of experiments designed to elicit, within a controlled laboratory env...
Although the contingent valuation method has been widely used to value a diverse array of nonmarket ...
Questionnaire surveys are an established economic research method for eliciting consumers' surplus v...
Recent attempts to test the validity of the contingent valuation method have relied on laboratory-ty...
Concern exists that hypothetical willingness to pay questions overestimate real willingness to pay. ...
Significant difference between response to real and hypothetical valuation questions is often referr...
Hypothetical, real, and predicted real willingness to pay in open-ended surveys: experimental result
Individuals are widely believed to overstate their economic valuation of a good by a factor of two o...
Significant difference between response to real and hypothetical valuation questions is often referr...
WP 1996-16 November 1996Past research suggests that contingent valuation overstates demand for publi...
Contingent valuation (CV) is a surveying technique used to estimate the willingness to pay (WTP) by ...
Data set and codebook variables for paper Incentives in Surveys, accepted for publication in the ...
In a paper published in the Journal of Political Economy, Cummings et al. experimentally compare hyp...
Experimental data comparing hypothetical and real dichotomous choice responses for two different goo...
Significant difference between response to real and hypothetical valuation questions is often referr...