10 research outputs found

    Paying for Permanence: Public Preferences for Contaminated Site Cleanup

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    Attitudes Toward Catastrophe

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    International audienceIn light of climate change and other global threats, policy commentators sometimes urge that society should be more concerned about catastrophes. This paper reflects on what society's attitude toward low-probability, high-impact events is, or should be. We first argue that catastrophe risk can be conceived of as a spread in the distribution of losses. Based on this conception, we review studies from decision sciences, psychology, and behavioral economics that explore people's attitudes toward various social risks. Contray to popular belief, we find more evidence against than in favor of catastrophe aversion-the preference for a mean-preserving contraction of the loss distribution-and discuss a number of possible behavioral explanations. Next, we turn to social choice theory and examine how various social welfare functions handle catastrophe risk. We explain why catastrophe aversion may be in conflict with equity concerns and other-regarding preferences. Finally, we discuss current approaches to evaluate and regulate catastrophe risk

    Paying for permanence: Public preferences for contaminated site cleanup

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    We use conjoint choice questions to investigate the preferences of people in four cities in Italy for income and future/permanent mortality risk reductions delivered by contaminated site remediation policies. The VSL is €5.6 million for an immediate risk reduction. If the risk reduction takes place 20 years from now, the implied VSL is €1.26 million. Respondents’ implicit discount rate is 7%. The VSL depends on respondent characteristics, familiarity with contaminated sites, concern about the health effects of exposure to toxicants, having a family member with cancer, perceived usefulness of public programs and beliefs about the goals of government remediation programs. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007Value of a statistical life, Latent risk reductions, Individual discount rates, Conjoint choice questions, Contaminated sites, Remediation, J17, I18, K32, Q51, Q53,
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