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Subjective well-being and stated preferences: Explorations from a choice experiment in Norway

Academic article
Year of publication
2021
Journal
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
External websites
Cristin
Arkiv
Doi
Involved from NIVA
Wenting Chen
Contributors
Godwin Kofi Vondolia, Stephen Hynes, Claire W. Armstrong, Wenting Chen

Summary

Subjective well-being valuation has recently grown in use with applications in the fields of environment, health, and cultural heritage. With this methodology values are based on how non-market goods impact on self-reported measures of well-being such as life satisfaction. Despite the differences in theoretical foundations of subjective well-being and preference-based valuation methods, recent applications have attempted to integrate both approaches without the complete understanding of the effects of subjective well-being on stated preference elicitation. The present study investigates the extent to which subjective well-being impacts the responses to a choice experiment in Norway. The results indicate that momentary subjective well-being does not induce a higher level of randomness in the stated choices but rather affects the preferences for attribute. We also find that self-reported well-being measures respond differently to the cost attribute in the choice experiment. Furthermore, we compute marginal willingness-to-pays for various subjective well-being categories and discuss the implications of these results for an integrated modelling of subjective well-being and preference-based valuation methods.