Valuation of childhood risk reduction: The importance of age, risk preferences, and perspective

This article explores two problems analysts face in determining how to estimate values for children's health and safety risk reductions. The first addresses the question: Do willingness-to-pay estimates for health risk changes differ across children and adults, and, if so, how? To answer this question, the article first examines the potential effects of age and risk preferences on willingness to pay. A summary of the literature reporting empirical evidence of differences between willingness to pay for adult health and safety risk reductions and willingness to pay for health and safety risk reductions in children is also provided. The second dimension of the problem is a more fundamental issue: Whose perspective is relevant when valuing children's health effects- society's, children's, adults-as-children, or parents'? Each perspective is considered, followed ultimately by the conclusion that adopting a parental perspective through an intrahousehold allocation model seems closest to meeting the needs of the estimation problem at hand. A policy example in which the choice of perspective affects the outcome of a regulatory benefit-cost analysis rounds out the article and emphasises the importance of perspective.

Record #:
5668
Date:
2002
Format:
Journal Article
Author:
Dockins, Chris et al.
Corp:
United States Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Economics
Source:
Risk Analysis
Citation:
22(2)02
Keywords:
PROGRAMME DEVELOPMENT;BENEFIT-COST ANALYSIS;WILLINGNESS TO PAY
Identity:
USA
Location:
f
Class:
D230

Click here to contact us about this publication

Please note you will also need to add the Record # when contacting us.