Abstract

The percentage of protesters in contingent valuation surveys is substantial–about 20% across many studies. This paper seeks to clarify the motivations behind protest responses. In addition, the question whether the estimation of willingness to pay (WTP) is more biased by the exclusion or inclusion of protest bids is yet undecided. Methodological improvements are difficult for three reasons: motivations behind protest responses are largely unclear, definitions of protest differ between studies and often only participants who state a zero WTP are asked for their reasons. Our survey on farm animal welfare (n = 1335) provides detailed motivations, two definitions and includes debriefing of all participants for their WTP. We find that protest bids are not a refusal to answer, they are neither irrational nor driven by lack of understanding. Quite the contrary, a large part of participants is directly motivated by moral reasons. Furthermore, protest responses are not coupled to a zero WTP. In our sample, only 8% out of 32% protesting participants had a zero WTP. Only a small fraction of zero bids (0.4%) are true WTP-statements, i.e. respondents were satisfied with the status quo. This finding has important implications for existing WTP-estimates which might be biased. Finally, we provide detailed estimates of the WTP for animal welfare issues by including and excluding different types of protesters and outliers.

Highlights

  • Willingness to pay and protest responsesFor many projects and products it is crucial to correctly estimate the willingness to pay (WTP) of individuals for a broad variety of goods, because the aim of many decisions is to maximize social welfare and the option with the highest overall utility should be chosen

  • The best model with five latent classes corresponds very well with a moral interpretation of WTP and especially with a classification of protest responses

  • Our study shows in great detail (Table 5) that, WTP estimations are highly significantly different depending on the inclusion or exclusion of protest responses or outliers according to our two definitions of protest responses

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Summary

Introduction

For many projects and products it is crucial to correctly estimate the willingness to pay (WTP) of individuals for a broad variety of goods, because the aim of many decisions is to maximize social welfare and the option with the highest overall utility should be chosen. For environmental and ethical goods indirect use and non-use values [1]), like option, bequest or existence value but not their direct use-value are constitutive. By valuing environmental and ethical goods for other reasons than individual utility allows to express people’s moral attitude towards future generations and non-human beings.

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