SELF IMAGE AND CHOICE EXPERIMENTS: HYPOTHETICAL AND ACTUAL WILLINGNESS TO PAY
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Date
2003
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Abstract
This paper proposes that people derive utility from a positive self-image, influenced by
ethical views, internal honesty, and consistency between sequential choices. A model is
tested by conducting the same choice-experiment for two WWF-campaigns in three
different contexts. It predicts that marginal WTP for contributions to these campaigns is
highest when choices are hypothetical, lower in a real-money experiment that follows a
hypothetical experiment, and lowest when real-money choices are made directly.
Additionally, it predicts that marginal WTP decreases with the scale of financial
incentives in a real-money experiment. The empirical results are consistent with these
hypotheses.
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Keywords
choice experiment; self-image; hypothetical and real WTP; cognitive dissonance; environmental valuation