Disability and Marginal Utility of Income
Abstract
It is often assumed that disability lowers the marginal utility of income. In this article individuals’ marginal
utility of income in two states, (1) paralyzed in both legs from birth and (2) not mobility impaired at
all, are measured through experimental choices between imagined lotteries behind a so-called “veil of
ignorance”. The outcomes of the lotteries include both income and disability status. It is found that most
people have higher marginal utility when paralyzed than when not mobility impaired at all. The median
ratio of the two marginal utilities is estimated at between 1.16 and 1.92. The two marginal utilities are
evaluated at the same levels of income.
Quite little of the heterogeneity in this ratio can be explained by socio-economic background, but having
personal experience of mobility impairment and supporting the Left party, the Social democratic party,
the Green party or the Liberal party are associated with having a high ratio. The results suggest, in
contrast to e.g. Finkelstein et al. (2008) and Viscusi and Evans (1990) that more than full insurance of
income losses connected to being disabled is optimal. The results further suggests, in contrast to e.g. Sen
(1997) and Roemer (1985, 1996, 2001), that given a utilitarian social welfare function resources should be
transferred to, rather than from, disabled people. Finally, if the transfers are not large enough to smooth
out the marginal utilities of the disabled and the non-disabled, distributional weights based on disability
status (in opposite to income) should be used in cost-benefit analysis.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007-11-21Author
Tengstam, Sven
Keywords
Disability
Mobility impairment
Marginal utility
Hypothetical lotteries
Risk
JEL: D10; D60; D63; I10; I30
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
276
Language
eng