Does age matter for the value of life? - Evidence from a choice experiment in rural Bangladesh
Sammanfattning
Using a random sample of individuals in rural Bangladesh, this paper investigates people’s preferences regarding relative values of lives when it comes to different ages of the individuals being saved. By assuming that an individual has preferences concerning different states of the world, and that these preferences can be described by an individual social welfare function, the individuals’ preferences for life-saving programs are elicited using a pair-wise choice experiment between different life-saving programs. In the analyses, we calculate the social marginal rates of substitution between saved lives of people of different ages. We also test whether people have preferences for saving more life-years rather than only saving lives. In particular, we test and compare the two hypotheses that only lives matter and that only life-years matter. The results indicate that the value of a saved life decreases rapidly with age and that people have strong preferences for saving life-years rather than lives per se. Overall, the results clearly show the importance of the number of life-years saved in the valuation of life.
Samlingar
Fil(er)
Datum
2009-10-19Författare
Johansson-Stenman, Olof
Mahmud, Minhaj
Martinsson, Peter
Nyckelord
social preferences
life-saving programs
choice experiment
relative value of life
Publikationstyp
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Serie/rapportnr.
Working Papers in Economics
389
Språk
eng