Willingness to pay
In: A Primer on Environmental Decision-Making, S. 123-145
3265048 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: A Primer on Environmental Decision-Making, S. 123-145
In: The Wharton School Research Paper Forthcoming
SSRN
The work of Christoph Breidert is positioned in a methodologically challenging area of marketing research that is highly relevant to both theoretical investigations and practical apphcations. Determination of willingness-to-pay for products and/or services from a customers per spective is crucial for modern approaches to pricing decision-making. Based on the in creasing availability of individual transaction data (e. g. , scanner data, consumer panel data, and data from Smart Cards) remarkable improvements have been achieved in es timating advanced price response models based on observed pu
In: Aljamal, A., M. Bagnied, & M. Speece. 2015. Willingness to Pay for Water in Kuwait. 15th EBES Conference – Lisbon (Eurasia Business and Economics Society), Lisbon, January 8-10, 2015.
SSRN
Working paper
In: Journal of consumer research: JCR ; an interdisciplinary journal, Band 39, Heft 1, S. 1-21
ISSN: 1537-5277
In: Cost-Benefit Analysis and the Environment, S. 155-167
In: Harvard Law School John M. Olin Center Discussion Paper No. 1040, 2020
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
In: Michael O'Donnell, Ellen R. K. Evers (2019), "Preference Reversals in Willingness to Pay and Choice," Journal of Consumer Research, 45, 6 (April), 1315–1330
SSRN
In: Contemporary economic policy: a journal of Western Economic Association International, Band 13, Heft 4, S. 93-104
ISSN: 1465-7287
This paper uses a referendum‐style survey approach known as dichotomous‐choice contingent valuation to estimate the benefits of restricting the uses of 6.9 million acres of desert land. Statistical techniques estimate the value to California residents of creating three new national parks and 76 new wilderness areas in the high and low deserts of eastern California. The total amount that California residents would be willing to pay to enact desert protection legislation ranges from $177 million to $448 million per year. This estimate hinges on the assumptions that (i) the residents who did not complete and return the survey questionnaire ("nonrespondents") would receive no benefits from desert protection and (ii) the estimate of willingness to pay for the "respondents" is unbiased.
In: CESifo Working Paper No. 9469
SSRN
SSRN
In: In Proceedings of the 20th Annual Workshop on the Economics of Information Security (WEIS 2021).
SSRN
In: Desmet , P T M & Weber , F 2021 , ' Infringers' willingness to pay compensation versus fines ' , European Journal of Law and Economics , vol. 53 , no. 1 , pp. 63-80 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s10657-021-09709-2
In many areas such as consumer law or competition law, legislators can opt between two alternative forms of sanctions to remedy wrongdoing: they can impose an infringer to pay either a fine or a compensation. There is a major research gap regarding the infringers' reactions to the different forms of sanctions. This paper reports an experiment that investigated infringers' willingness to pay compensation versus fines. Results show that regardless of victim characteristics (whether the victim is a company or an NGO), infringers are willing to pay higher amounts in compensation than in fines, view compensation as more fair and believe compensation is better able to restore their reputation. Compensation and fines did not differ in the extent to which they stimulated infringers' willingness to take precautionary measures. Participants who inflicted harm to a company rather than an NGO, surprisingly viewed their sanction as more fair, irrespective of the type of sanction in place. Our findings highlight some important strengths of compensation from a infringer's point of view that are to be weighed in the policy debate.
BASE
In: European Journal of Law and Economics, 2021; available open access at https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10657-021-09709-2
SSRN