Conference paper
Effects of Information Framing and Information Seeking Behavior on Willingness-to-pay for a Wildfire Management Program
Proceedings of the 2015 Agricultural & Applied Economics Association and Western Agricultural Economics Association Annual Meeting, pp.1-33
Agricultural & Applied Economics Association (AAEA) and Western Agricultural Economics Association (WAEA) Annual Meeting, 2015 (San Francisco, United States, 26-Jul-2015–28-Jul-2015)
Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
2015
Abstract
Provision of adequate and unbiased information is a prerequisite for contingent valuation. However, there remains substantial disagreement and lack of understanding regarding how information provided in the survey influences responses to valuation questions. In this study, we examine the effects of wording of the willingness-to-pay (WTP) statement (question framing), the level of information provided by the survey instrument (information framing), and prior exposure of respondents to information about the issue on WTP for a wildfire management program to reduce wildfire risk. Question framing had a statistically insignificant effect on WTP. On its own, information framing was a statistically insignificant determinant of WTP; however, became significant when prior exposure of respondents to information was accounted for. For all information framing levels considered in the study, respondents with greater prior exposure to information were found to have higher WTP than those with less prior exposure. Respondents used information provided in the survey to update their risk perceptions and WTP for the program, although the direction of change was conditional on their prior exposure to information. As the level of information provided by the survey increased, the WTP of respondents with alternative levels of prior exposure to information converged. This convergence supports calls from practitioners to better inform survey recipients about the good they are being asked to value. Our study suggests testing the level of agreement between respondents with differing levels of prior information may be desirable for increasing the level of confidence with which non-market valuation estimates may be used to support decision-making.
Details
- Title
- Effects of Information Framing and Information Seeking Behavior on Willingness-to-pay for a Wildfire Management Program
- Authors
- Hari Katuwal (Author) - University of Montana, United StatesTyron J Venn (Author) - University of the Sunshine Coast - Faculty of Science, Health, Education and EngineeringTravis Paveglio (Author) - University of Idaho, United StatesTony Prato (Author) - University of Missouri-Columbia, United States
- Publication details
- Proceedings of the 2015 Agricultural & Applied Economics Association and Western Agricultural Economics Association Annual Meeting, pp.1-33
- Conference details
- Agricultural & Applied Economics Association (AAEA) and Western Agricultural Economics Association (WAEA) Annual Meeting, 2015 (San Francisco, United States, 26-Jul-2015–28-Jul-2015)
- Publisher
- Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
- Date published
- 2015
- Copyright note
- Copyright © 2015 by Hari Katuwal, Tyron J. Venn, Travis Paveglio and Tony Prato. All rights reserved. Readers may make verbatim copies of this document for non-commercial purposes by any means, provided that this copyright notice appears on all such copies.
- Organisation Unit
- University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99449607102621
- Output Type
- Conference paper
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