We show that ambiguity aversion increases the value of a statistical life as soon as the marginal utility of wealth is higher if alive than dead. The intuition is that ambiguity aversion has a similar effect as an increase in the perceived baseline mortality risk, and thus operates as the “dead anyway” effect. We suggest, however, that ambiguity aversion should usually have a modest effect on the prevention of ambiguous mortality risks within benefit-cost analysis, and can hardly justify the substantial “ambiguity premium” apparently embodied in environmental policy-making.ambiguity, value-of-a-statistical-life, uncertainty, risk-aversion, willingness-to-pay, benefit-cost analysis, environmental risk, health policy
The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an impli...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
How does the value of life affect annuity demand? To address this question, we construct a portfolio...
CESifo Working Paper ; 2291 2291We show that ambiguity aversion increases the value of a statistical...
We show that ambiguity aversion increases the value of a statistical life as soon as the marginal ut...
The value of a statistical life (VSL) is a key parameter in the analysis of government policy. Most ...
This paper investigates the effect of changes in ambiguity on the value of statistical life (VSL) un...
The value of a statistical life (VSL) is a key parameter in the analysis of government policy. Most ...
Economic evaluation of projects involving changes in mortality risk conventionally assumes that live...
Global environmental phenomena like climate change, major extinction events or flutype pandemics can...
In most medical decisions, probabilities are ambiguous and not objectively known. Empirical evidence...
Mortality is a stochastic process. We have imprecise knowledge about the probability distribution of...
In this paper, ambiguity aversion to uncertain survival probabilities is introduced in a life-cycle...
Global environmental phenomena like climate change, major extinction events or flutype pandemics can...
The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an impli...
The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an impli...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
How does the value of life affect annuity demand? To address this question, we construct a portfolio...
CESifo Working Paper ; 2291 2291We show that ambiguity aversion increases the value of a statistical...
We show that ambiguity aversion increases the value of a statistical life as soon as the marginal ut...
The value of a statistical life (VSL) is a key parameter in the analysis of government policy. Most ...
This paper investigates the effect of changes in ambiguity on the value of statistical life (VSL) un...
The value of a statistical life (VSL) is a key parameter in the analysis of government policy. Most ...
Economic evaluation of projects involving changes in mortality risk conventionally assumes that live...
Global environmental phenomena like climate change, major extinction events or flutype pandemics can...
In most medical decisions, probabilities are ambiguous and not objectively known. Empirical evidence...
Mortality is a stochastic process. We have imprecise knowledge about the probability distribution of...
In this paper, ambiguity aversion to uncertain survival probabilities is introduced in a life-cycle...
Global environmental phenomena like climate change, major extinction events or flutype pandemics can...
The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an impli...
The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an impli...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
How does the value of life affect annuity demand? To address this question, we construct a portfolio...