Difference in Preferences or in Preference Orderings? Comparing Choices of Environmental Bureaucrats, Recreational Anglers, and the Public
Abstract
Do Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) bureaucrats represent the general public or are they more in line with an interest group? We study preferences for environmental policy using a choice experiment (CE) on three populations; the general public, Swedish EPA bureaucrats, and recreational anglers. We also test for existence of multiple preference orderings, i.e., whether responses differ depending on the decision role assigned. Half of the respondents were asked to choose the alternatives that best
corresponded with their opinion, and the other half was asked to take the role of a policymaker
and make recommendations for environmental policy. The SEPA bureaucrats have the highest marginal willingness to pay (MWTP) to improve environmental quality. These differences are robust and not due to differences in socio-economic characteristics across the populations. We found little evidence of multiple preference orderings, but in one case the difference in MWTP between the two roles was substantial.
Other description
JEL:D61, H41, Q51, Q58
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-08Author
Eggert, Håkan
Kataria, Mitesh
Lampi, Elina
Keywords
choice experiment
distribution
environmental valuation
Homo Economicus
Homo Politicus
multiple preference orderings
willingness to pay
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
669
Language
eng