Economics
Evaluating willingness to pay for the temporal distribution of different air quality improvements: Is China's clean air target adequate to ensure welfare maximization?
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Stated preference analyses seeking to determine the public's value for air quality improvements often estimate willingness to pay (WTP) for days at a specified minimum quality threshold (e.g., days with clean air), but do not consider the temporal distribution of pollution levels below this threshold. This paper develops a choice experiment designed to evaluate WTP for a more complete distribution of air quality improvements, including the number of days per year at multiple air quality levels. The model is applied to a case study of air quality improvement in the core districts of Xi'an City, China. Results from a linearly constrained mixed logit model demonstrate that average household WTP for improving a lightly polluted, moderately polluted, heavily polluted, or severely polluted day to a clean air day is 7.42, 8.90, 13.06, and 24.28 RMB per year, respectively. These results show that WTP depends not only on the total number of clean air days, but on the total distribution of pollution levels across all days of the year. Results are directly relevant to the development of clean air policies in China, for which benefit estimates are currently unavailable.
Publication Title
Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics
Publication Date
6-2019
Volume
67
Issue
2
First Page
215
Last Page
232
ISSN
0008-3976
DOI
10.1111/cjag.12189
Keywords
air quality, choice experiment, compensating surplus, mixed logit, pollution control
Repository Citation
Yao, Liuyang; Deng, Junfeng; Johnston, Robert J.; Khan, Imran; and Zhao, Minjuan, "Evaluating willingness to pay for the temporal distribution of different air quality improvements: Is China's clean air target adequate to ensure welfare maximization?" (2019). Economics. 157.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_economics/157