222 research outputs found

    VALUE OF IRRIGATION WATER IN THE MIDDLE ATLANTIC STATES: AN ECONOMETRIC APPROACH

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    Estimation of the economic value of irrigation water is complicated by a lack of data on the price or marginal cost of water. Through econometric estimation of an aggregate total value product function, this paper obtains marginal irrigation water value estimates for the Middle Atlantic region. Additionally, the impact of temperature and soil conditions on aggregate production within the region is estimated. Ridge regression and covariance analysis are employed to deal with problems of multicollinearity and simultaneous equation bias, respectively. Estimates indicate a substantial and growing return to irrigation within the region.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    Simulated Trading for Maryland's Nitrogen Loadings in the Chesapeake Bay

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    We investigate nutrient trading for point and non-point sources for the Bay Restoration Fund in Maryland. We demonstrate how to use the proceeds from the tax revenue to mimic a market by trading high-cost upgrades of sewage treatment plants for low-cost winter cover crops. Under an optimistic assumption about costs for non-point sources and naïve assumptions about the lag from planting cover crops to changes in nitrogen load, we calculate that 100 percent of abatement could be achieved at 56 percent of total costs, while in a pessimistic scenario, 100 percent of abatement could be could be achieved at 83 percent of total costs.Chesapeake Bay, cover crops, nitrogen abatement, nutrient trading, sewage treatment plants, trading ratios, water pollution, Environmental Economics and Policy,

    SOME PRELIMINARY EVIDENCE ON SAMPLING OF ALTERNATIVES WITH THE RANDOM PARAMETERS LOGIT

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    Random utility models rely on the properties of the logistic distribution for ease of estimation, but this distribution implies the independence of irrelevant alternatives (IIA). The random parameters logit model offers a means of avoiding the IIA assumption as well as greater heterogeneity among agents, recreational anglers or beachgoers in the current application. A problem often encountered in the estimation of random utility models with many alternatives is the necessity of sampling alternatives or otherwise reducing the number of choices. Research has shown that in the random utility model, such changes in choice set still lead to consistent parameter estimates. However, with the random parameters logit, there is greater need to sample but no theoretical evidence that sampling is justified. In this paper we show the impact of sampling in a random parameters logit model. We find that sampling does not appear to change the parameter estimates substantially. We investigate two data sets: a study of beach use in the Chesapeake Bay and a study of marine recreational angling behavior for the Northeast of the U.S.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    Nutrient Trading, the Flush Tax, and Maryland's Nitrogen Emissions to the Chesapeake Bay

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    We investigate nutrient trading for point and non-point sources for the Bay Restoration Fund in Maryland. We demonstrate how to use the proceeds from the tax revenue to mimic trading high-cost upgrades of sewage treatment plants for low-cost winter cover crops. Under an optimistic assumption about costs for non-point sources, we calculate that abatement could be increased by more than 50%, while in a pessimistic scenario, abatement could be increased by 2%. We also explore the role of uncertainty in determining the appropriate trading ratio between point and non-point sources of pollution, showing that the higher uncertainty associated with non-point sources should induce a lower trading ratio.Chesapeake Bay, cover crops, nitrogen abatement, nutrient trading, sewage treatment plants, trading ratios, water pollution, Environmental Economics and Policy,

    A Random Utility Model for Sportfishing: Some Preliminary Results for Florida

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    The gray literature in the field of nonmarket benefit measurement has made extensive use of the random utility (or discrete choice) model in recent years, but few applications appear in the literature. This article provides such an application, illustrating the technique with preliminary results from a regional study modeling east cost sportfishing behavior. The article discusses some of the strengths and weaknesses of the random utility model. It also illustrates how data regularly collected by the National Marine Fisheries Service can be supplemented with economic survey data to estimate these discrete choice behavioral models.Random utility, discrete choice, sportfishing, nonmarket benefits, environmental quality, Environmental Economics and Policy, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    Measuring the Benefits of Improvements in Water Quality: The Chesapeake Bay

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    Federal, state, and local government agencies have joined forces in the ambitious and expensive task of improving the water quality of the Chesapeake Bay. Clean-up efforts will be devoted to three major problems: nutrient over enrichment, toxic substances, and the decline of submerged aquatic vegetation. Although the beneficiaries are ultimately human, criteria for judging the Bay's water quality have been primarily biological and physical. This paper addresses the question of the human values from the Bay. How do people use the Bay and how much are they willing to pay for the changes in water quality that improve their use? With a variety of methods and data sources, we estimate the annual aggregate willingness to pay for a moderate improvement in the Chesapeake Bay's water quality to be in the range of 10to10 to 100 million in 1984 dollars.Community/Rural/Urban Development, Environmental Economics and Policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    Random Utility Models of Recreational Fishing: Catching Fish Using a Poisson Process

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    This paper presents a Poisson model of expected angler catch during a sportfishing trip and employs the expected catch in a random utility model of site choice. The approach permits greater heterogeneity in expected catch and in individual welfare estimates from policies such as creel limits.sportfishing, creel limits, expected catch, Environmental Economics and Policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    DIMINISHING MARGINAL VALUE

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    The notion of diminishing marginal value has had a profound impact on the development of neoclassical theory. Early neoclassical scholars had considerable difficulty convincing contemporaries of the new paradigm's value until political economists, including Jevons and Walras, used the critical assumption of diminishing marginal value to link utility and demand. While diminishing marginal value remains a key component of modern economic intuition, there is surprisingly little empirical verification of its existence or level. This paper gathers field data across a myriad of subject pools--from undergraduate students to PTA members to sportscard enthusiasts--to examine several aspects of preferences in both price and exchange institutions. Examining behavior of nearly 900 subjects across several treatments, we find strong evidence of diminishing marginal value.Research Methods/ Statistical Methods,
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