The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an implicit assumption of risk neutrality with respect to life duration. To overpass this limitation, we extend the theory to a simple variety of nonadditively separable preferences. The enlargement we propose is relevant for the evaluation of life-saving programs: current practice, we estimate, puts too little weight on mortality risk reduction of the young. Our correction exceeds in magnitude that introduced by the switch from the notion of number of lives saved to the notion of years of life saved
There are no explicit markets for mortality risk reduction. An individual cannot purchase ‘‘mortalit...
Much of the literature on the value of life is based on the valuation of small reductions in mortali...
A theoretical model of the ethical preferences of individuals is tested by conducting a choice exper...
The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an impl...
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...
This paper shows the poor capacity of the additively separable life-cycle model to fit empirical val...
The 1980s marked the first decade in which use of estimates of the value of life based on risk trade...
The standard model of intertemporal choice assumes risk neutrality towards the length of life: under...
This paper makes explicit the links between preferences over lotteries on length of life and interte...
This paper introduces a life-cycle model where impatience, instead of being driven by an exogenous d...
A choice model based on utility in each of a sequence of prospective future health states permits us...
Although the value of reducing mortality risks and that of reducing life year losses are closely rel...
We assess individuals’ preferences for time paths of reductions in mortality risk yielding a life-ex...
This paper develops two straightforward value of life models; one is a probabilistic value of life m...
There are no explicit markets for mortality risk reduction. An individual cannot purchase ‘‘mortalit...
Much of the literature on the value of life is based on the valuation of small reductions in mortali...
A theoretical model of the ethical preferences of individuals is tested by conducting a choice exper...
The standard literature on the value of life relies on Yaari’s (1965) model, which includes an impl...
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...
This paper shows the poor capacity of the additively separable life-cycle model to fit empirical val...
The 1980s marked the first decade in which use of estimates of the value of life based on risk trade...
The standard model of intertemporal choice assumes risk neutrality towards the length of life: under...
This paper makes explicit the links between preferences over lotteries on length of life and interte...
This paper introduces a life-cycle model where impatience, instead of being driven by an exogenous d...
A choice model based on utility in each of a sequence of prospective future health states permits us...
Although the value of reducing mortality risks and that of reducing life year losses are closely rel...
We assess individuals’ preferences for time paths of reductions in mortality risk yielding a life-ex...
This paper develops two straightforward value of life models; one is a probabilistic value of life m...
There are no explicit markets for mortality risk reduction. An individual cannot purchase ‘‘mortalit...
Much of the literature on the value of life is based on the valuation of small reductions in mortali...
A theoretical model of the ethical preferences of individuals is tested by conducting a choice exper...