Title
Estimating the Value of a Statistical Life: The Importance of Omitted Variables and Publication Bias
Author(s)
Orley Ashenfelter Orley Ashenfelter (Princeton University and NBER)
Michael Greenstone Michael Greenstone (MIT, American Bar Foundation and NBER)
Abstract
Measures of public preferences toward risk are critical to evaluations of public policies on many safety, environmental, and health issues. In this paper we provide a method for measuring the revealed preferences for safety risks from state level public choices about speed limits. The idea is to measure the value of the time saved per incremental fatality that results from the voluntary adoption of an increased speed limit. Since adopters must have valued the time saved by greater speeds more than the fatalities created, this ratio provides a convincing and credible upper bound on the value of a statistical life (VSL).
Creation Date
2004-01
Section URL ID
CEPS
Paper Number
97
URL
https://gceps.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/97ashenfelter.pdf
File Function
Jel
J17, K13
Keyword(s)
Suppress
false
Series
3