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Valuation of ecosystem
services III&IV
Charit tingsabadh
25 September 2007
1
Revised Schedule, 25/9/07
Lecture No./date
Topic
Remarks/readigns
1st, 17-9-2007
Natural systems: coral reefs and other
marine ecosystems
Udomsak’s Phi Phi Study
2nd , 18-9-2007
Natural Systems: Forest ecosystems -
Direk’s Khao Yai Study
3rd , 19-92007(cancelled)
Natural Systems Biodiversity (TBA)
Simpson
4th , 20-9-2007
Practical work: survey design: case
based on Bangkok
TBA
5th , 25-9-2007
Environmental resource: air quality and
health impacts
Class discussion and group
work
6th , 26-9-2007
Environmental resource: water qualityhealth and recreational values
7th , 28-9-2007
Revision exercises: Assignment
presentation 1: air and water quality
cases
8th , 24-9-2007
(cancelled)
Revision exercises: Assignment
presentation 2(TBA)
Open book
2
outline
•
•
•
•
•
•
Environmental attributes
Price as sum of values of attributes
Hedonic price method
Implicit price from price function
Examples
House price and environmental attributes
3
Environmental attributes
• Goods seen as a bundle of attributes,
including environmental ones
• Give examples:
– House near airport– House near garbage dump site
– House near park with good view
– House near BTS
– Etc.
4
Price as sum of values of attributes
• When we buy a house, we buy the whole bundle
• But how does each attribute give value to the
total price
• Think of a computer- specifications differentiate
cheap and expensive computers
• Imagine a price function for a cimputer
• Same with other goods, involving environmental
attributes
5
Hedonic price method
• Price function called Hedonic price
function
• Can have various specifications (forms)
• See example:
6
valuation with hedonic price model
• From price function, derive implicit price
function
• Use this to derive demand curve
• Apply standard demand theory to find
consumer surplus
7
Valuation 5: Hedonic Pricing
• A partial equilibrium model of prices,
wages and pollution
• The hedonic price equation
• From hedonic prices to welfare
• Applications: Forests and earthquakes
8
Last week we looked at
• The travel cost method, which assumes that
certain observable behaviour is a complement
(e.g., travel to recreate) or substitute (e.g.,
airbag for road safety) to unobservable
consumption of an environmental good or
service
• Before that, we looked at restricted demand
theory and welfare measures, and contingent
valuation: stated preferences
• This week: The other revealed preference
method, looking at household consumption
9
The Price of Land
• The asset price equals the value of the
stream of services that the parcel can be
expected to provide in the future, netted
back to the present
• The rental price of land is the value of
renting for a short period, e.g., for
agricultural land, the difference between
expected yield times prices minus the costs
of labour, seeds, pesticides etc
• Pollution degrades value and thus price
10
Starters
• Consider agricultural land in a valley, half of
which is upwind a polluting plant, the other
half downwind – the difference between land
value is only an indication of the value of
pollution if this is a small valley in a large
market
• Consider an open city, with free mobility –
utility must be the same everywhere, so land
prices exactly compensate for pollution; in a
closed city, reducing non-uniform pollution
would affect property values as well as utility
11
Wages, Land Prices and Pollution
• Arguably, pollution should suppress land prices
– but we see that urban land is worth more
than rural land
• Urban wages are also higher than rural wages
– do wages compensate for pollution?
• We will construct a model of urban land
prices, wages and pollution -- first,
analytically and then we‘ll derive a function
that can be estimated
12
Wages, Land Prices and Pollution -2
• Consider a number of cities that have
different levels of pollution p; firms produce
a composite good X (at price 1) and move
about freely; the wage rate is w and the land
rent r vary between cities
• Consumers are identical, purchase X and land
for housing L
maxU (Xfree
, L, p )movement,
s.t. w  X utility
 rL is the same
• Assuming
X ,L
everywhere: V(w,r,p)=k
13
Wages, Land Prices and Pollution -3
• In a constant cost industry, average
production costs equal marginal production
costs equal price, so that for all cities
c(w,r,p)=1
• Pollution may affect costs in different ways
– Unproductive (pollution hinders production)
– Productive (pollution regulation hinders prod.)
– Neutral (but wages and rents affect prod.)
14
Wages, Land Prices and Pollution -4
• Higher pollution must be compensated by
either higher wages or lower land rents
• V=k, p  w, r
• If pollution is productive, pollution raises
wages but has an ambiguous effect on land
rents c=1, p  w, r
• If pollution is unproductive, pollution
depresses land prices but has an ambiguous
effect on wages c=1, p  w, r
• If pollution is neutral, pollution decreases
land prices and increases wages
15
Hedonic Price Theory
• Consider an homogenous area that can be
considered a single market from the point of
view of, say, houses
• Each house is characterised by a single
characteristic, z, say, air pollution
• We are interested in the relation between
price and air quality, p = p(z)
• We look at the partial equilibrium, and assume
that the market is perfect
16
Hedonic Price Theory -2
• The consumer buys exactly one house as well
as other goods x
maxU (x , z ) s.t.
x
 p (z ) the
y budget for
• Alternatively,
we
consider
x ,z
buying the house, guaranteeing a certain level
of utility
U (yisknown
 , z )  as
Uˆ 
y , zfunction
,Uˆ)
• This
the (bid
– it tells you
the maximum amount a consumer is willing to
pay as a function of income and air pollution
17
Hedonic Price Theory -3
• The producer maximises profits
ˆ )function – it tells
 is known
 c (r , zas
)
 (offer
r,z , 
• This
the
you the minimum amount a producer is willing
to accept as a function of costs and air
pollution
• In the equilibrium, the marginal bid, the
marginal offer, and the house price are
identical – all parties in the market value the
house the same, at the margin
18
Hedonic Price Theory -4
• The hedonic price function tells you how price
varies with environmental quality and other
factors (income)
• Take the derivative of the price to
environmental quality – this gives the price of
environmental quality
• Do this for various income levels
• This gives the price of env. quality as a
function of income – that is, an inverse
demand function
• Sometimes direct, sometimes statistical
19
Theory and practice
• Theory and practice differ substantially
• Niceties such as the difference between
compensated and uncompensated demand
functions are typically ignored
• Only one market (housing) is analysed
• Market distortions are ignored
• The reason: data; although wages and
house prices are known, it is hard to get
data because of privacy – one can readily
get ask prices for houses that are
currently on offer, but not actual prices
20
Application: Earthquakes
• Does earthquake risk affect house prices?
• California designated Special Study Zones
(SSZs) which are risky; house owners know
and tell potential buyers
• The price of house in these zones is $4650
($2490) lower than that of identical house
outside those zones in Los Angelos (San
Francisco)
• This is half the price of a swimming pool, a
third of a view
• Before notification, risks were irrelevant
21
Ln(home sale price)
LA
Age of home
SF
-.002
.0005
.00003
.00005
# Bathrooms
.098
.260
Pool
.093
.067
View
.143
.128
SSZ
-.056
-.033
School quality
.020
.012
Percent black
-.00004
-.006
-.001
-.004
-2.313
-.401
-.016
-
.79
.69
4865
5438
Size
Air pollution
Distance to work
Distance to beach
R2
# Obs
22
Application: Forests
• Do green areas affect house prices?
• The city of Salo, 32,000 inhabitants, in
Finland
• About 10% of the area is green
• 590 appartments in terraced houses were
sold between 1984-1986
• The sale price was regressed on size, distance
to city centre, distance to Nokia, age, forest
view, type of house, and distance to nearest
green area (based on satellite images)
23
24
example
Leggett&Bockstael,1998:
Evidence of the Effects of
Water Quality on
Residential land Prices
25
Another Example
26
Lecture IV: Green GDP
• From valuing ecosystems to including
them into GDP accounts
• What to do?
• Green GDP:
Concept
Measurement
Results
27
Green GDP:
Concept
• GDP measures flow of value-added from
activities
• Capital measured for GDP as investment (+/change in capital stock) on expenditure side
• Green GDP should measure what?
• Flow: ecosystem services
• Stock: change in the stock of natural capital that
produces the ecosystem services
28
Measurement (1)
• For flows, may be already accounted for
as part of operating surplus, overstating
the rate of profit if natural capital is used
• This can be considered resource rent
• Example: raw water is not costed for
production of tap water, so profit of water
company includes rent from use of raw
water
29
Measurement (2)
• For Stock: value of change in stock of natural
capital is not included in GDP estimate
• Example: conversion of forest land to farm land
counts as +investment for land, but as –
investment for forest
• Water quality deterioration implies loss of
amenity values, but cost is not counted
• MANY PROBLEMS!!
• See SEEA by the UNSNA
• Also paper on ENRAP
30
Results
• This will be an interesting class
assignment, for someone to
present in the presentation
sessions.
Thank you
31