What is the Causal Effect of Information and Learning about a Public Good on Willingness to Pay?


Autoria(s): Czajkowski, Mikolaj; Hanley, Nick; LaRiviere, Jacob; Simpson, Katherine
Data(s)

09/06/2014

09/06/2014

2014

Resumo

In this study we elicit agents’ prior information set regarding a public good, exogenously give information treatments to survey respondents and subsequently elicit willingness to pay for the good and posterior information sets. The design of this field experiment allows us to perform theoretically motivated hypothesis testing between different updating rules: non-informative updating, Bayesian updating, and incomplete updating. We find causal evidence that agents imperfectly update their information sets. We also field causal evidence that the amount of additional information provided to subjects relative to their pre-existing information levels can affect stated WTP in ways consistent overload from too much learning. This result raises important (though familiar) issues for the use of stated preference methods in policy analysis.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10943/553

Publicador

University of Stirling

Relação

SIRE DISCUSSION PAPER;SIRE-DP-2014-009

Palavras-Chave #Bayesian #Public Goods #Behavioral Economics #Stated Preference
Tipo

Working Paper