Self-Image and Valuation of Moral Goods: Stated versus Real Willingness to Pay
Abstract
Hypothetical bias in stated-preference methods appears sometimes to be very large, and other times non-existent. This is here largely explained by a model where people derive utility from a positive self-image associated with morally commendable behavior. The results of a choice experiment are consistent with the predictions of this model; the hypothetical marginal willingness to pay (MWTP) for a moral good (contributions to a WWF project) is significantly higher than the corresponding real MWTP, whereas no hypothetical bias is present for an amoral good (a restaurant voucher). Moreover, both the theoretical model and the experimental evidence suggest that also the real MWTP for the moral good is biased upwards by being higher within than outside the experimental context.
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Date
2011-01Author
Johansson-Stenman, Olof
Svedsäter, Henrik
Keywords
Stated-preference methods
choice experiment
hypothetical bias
self-image
non-market valuation
warm glow
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
484
Language
eng