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The Economic Valuation of the Environment and Public Policy: A Hedonic Approach PDF

186 Pages·2003·5.27 MB·English
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The Economic Valuation of the Environment and Public Policy NEW HORIZONS IN ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS Series Editors:Wallace E.Oates,Professor ofEconomics,University ofMaryland,USA and Henk Folmer,Professor ofGeneral Economics,Wageningen University and Professor ofEnvironmental Economics,Tilburg University,The Netherlands This important series is designed to make a significant contribution to the development ofthe prin- ciples and practices ofenvironmental economics.It includes both theoretical and empirical work. International in scope,it addresses issues ofcurrent and future concern in both East and West and in developed and developing countries. The main purpose ofthe series is to create a forum for the publication ofhigh quality work and to show how economic analysis can make a contribution to understanding and resolving the envi- ronmental problems confronting the world in the twenty-first century. Recent titles in the series include: Valuing Environmental and Natural Resources The Econometrics ofNon-Market Valuation Timothy C.Haab and Kenneth E.McConnell Controlling Global Warming Perspectives from Economics,Game Theory and Public Choice Edited by Christoph Böhringer,Michael Finus and Carsten Vogt Environmental Regulation in a Federal System Framing Environmental Policy in the European Union Tim Jeppesen The International Yearbook ofEnvironmental and Resource Economics 2002/2003 A Survey ofCurrent Issues Edited by Tom Tietenberg and Henk Folmer International Climate Policy to Combat Global Warming An Analysis ofthe Ancillary Benefits ofReducing Carbon Emissions Dirk T.G.Rübbelke Pollution,Property and Prices An Essay in Policy-making & Economics J.H.Dales The Contingent Valuation ofNatural Parks Assessing the Warmglow Propensity Factor Paulo A.L.D.Nunes Environmental Policy Making in Economics with Prior Tax Distortions Edited by Lawrence H.Goulder Recent Advances in Environmental Economics Edited by Aart de Zeeuw and John A.List Sustainability and Endogenous Growth Karen Pittel The Economic Valuation ofthe Environment and Public Policy A Hedonic Approach Noboru Hidano The Economic Valuation of the Environment and Public Policy A Hedonic Approach Noboru Hidano Professor,Department of Social Engineering,Tokyo Institute of Technology,Japan NEWHORIZONS IN ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS Edward Elgar Cheltenham,UK • Northampton,MA,USA © Noboru Hidano,2002 All rights reserved.No part of this publication may be reproduced,stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means,electronic, mechanical or photocopying,recording,or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher. Published by Edward Elgar Publishing Limited Glensanda House Montpellier Parade Cheltenham Glos GL50 1UA UK Edward Elgar Publishing,Inc. 136 West Street Suite 202 Northampton Massachusetts 01060 USA A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library ofCongress Cataloguing in Publication Data Hidano,Noboru,1949– The economic valuation of the environment and public policy:a hedonic approach / Noboru Hidano. p.cm.— (New horizons in environmental economics) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1.Environmental economics.2.Hedonism.3.Environmental policy. I.Title.II.Series. HD75.6.H53 2003 333.7—dc21 2002029827 ISBN1 84376 168 8 Printed and bound in Great Britain by Biddles Ltd,www.biddles.co.uk Contents List of figures ix List of tables xi Preface xiii 1 Introduction 1 2 The hedonic approach 9 Development of the hedonic conception 9 Rosen’s method and work in the 1970s 10 Econometrics after the 1980s 13 Scotchmer’s crucial comments 15 Reconsideration of capitalization theory 16 3 Theory of capitalization hypothesis 18 Two types of capitalization 18 Theory of cross-sectional capitalization 21 Extension 27 Conclusion 28 4 Hedonic measure as an approximation of benefit 29 Introduction 29 Examination of overestimation ratio 29 Results 31 An extension:CES functions 33 5 Empirical examination of the accuracy of the hedonic measure 37 Large national project evaluation 37 Introduction of accessibility and the model revised 37 Parameter estimation method and data 39 Results 42 Conclusion 44 6 Comparison with contingent valuation method 45 Meaning of comparison 45 Air pollution 46 v vi Contents Water Environment 47 Conclusion 49 7 Estimation of hedonic price function 51 Introduction 51 Market segmentation and sample size for hedonic analysis 51 Types of property data 52 Explanatory characteristics of a property 61 Making variables fit the reality 63 Hedonic price function and unit and form of variables 68 8 Hedonic price method in estimating the value of environment and institutional regulation 71 Introduction 71 Changes in consumer preference on an upper-class housing estate in Tokyo,1934 and 1985 71 Amenity value 74 Environmental cost 87 Value of institutional measures:The regulation on floor to land area ratio in the CBD 95 Characteristics of the values of the environment and public services 96 Concluding remark 101 9 Environmental cost–benefit analysis using the hedonic price method 102 Introduction 102 Basic principles of cost–benefit analysis 102 Procedure 111 A numerical example 117 Conclusions 123 10 Concluding remarks 125 Appendix 1 Proof of time-series capitalization 127 Appendix 2 Proof of the overestimation theorem 130 Appendix 3 Proof of equality conditions 134 Appendix 4 Model and proof of the overestimation theorem inthe case of heterogeneous consumers 139 Appendix 5 Short-run case 141 Appendix 6 Two-region general equilibrium model 144 Contents vii Appendix 7 Two-region two type of consumer general equilibrium model 147 Appendix 8 Schedule of benefits and costs 150 Notation 151 Bibliography 154 Index 163 Figures 2.1 Hedonic price function and bid price function 11 7.1 Land price map in Tokyo Metropolis 56 8.1 Cost of flood risk 76 8.2 Externality of neighbourhood amenity 80 8.3 Marginal value of green environment 86 8.4 Marginal negative value of façade 86 8.5 Marginal cost of noise 90 9.1 Equivalent and compensating variation,and equivalentandcompensating surplus 106 9.2 Barato River and Sapporo City,Japan 118 ix

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