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Title: 2281AES Economics and Natural Resources


1
2281AESEconomics and Natural Resources
  • Module 10 Economic Valuation of Environmental
    Costs and Benefits Hedonic or Property
    Valuation Technique
  • Lisa Alder

2
Sources
  • EMS and Land Valuation The potential for land
    valuation to drive the adoption of Environmental
    Management Systems in Agriculture, A report for
    the Rural Industries Research and Development
    Corporation by Catherine Nind, Department of
    Agriculture, Western Australia, May 2002, RIRDC
    Publication No. 02/040
  • Techniques to Value Environmental Resourcesan
    Introductory Handbook, Published as a joint
    exercise by the Commonwealth Department of the
    Environment, Sport and Territories, The
    Commonwealth Department of Finance, and the
    Resource Assessment Commission, Australian
    Government Publishing Service, 1995

3
Case Studies
  • Streeting, Mark (1990) A Survey of the Hedonic
    Pricing Technique, Resource Assessment
    Commission, Research Paper No.1, Australian
    Government Publishing Service, Canberra.
  • King, D.A. and Sinden, J.A. (1988) 'Influence of
    Soil Conservation on Farm Land Values', Land
    Economics, vol.64, no.3, pp.242-255.

4
Theory
  • Hedonics is based on the hypothesis that any
    product represents a bundle of characteristics
    that define quality.
  • Rosen (1974), first explored goods valued for
    their utility-generating attributes.
  • Rosen suggests there are competitive implicit
    markets that define implicit prices for embodied
    product attributes, and that consumers evaluate
    product attributes (e.g. features of a car,
    indicators of air or water quality) when making a
    purchasing decision.
  • The observed market price is the sum of implicit
    prices paid for each quality attribute.

5
Identification Problem
  • Rosen recognized an identification problem for
    supply and demand functions derived from hedonic
    price functions, because implicit prices are
    equilibrium prices jointly determined by supply
    and demand conditions.
  • Implicit prices may reflect not only consumer
    preferences but also factors that determine
    production.
  • In order to solve the identification problem it
    is necessary to separate supply and demand
    conditions.
  • Arguea and Hsiao (1993) argue that the
    identification problem is essentially a data
    issue that can be avoided by pooling
    cross-section and time-series data specific to a
    particular side of the market.

6
The concept
  • The price paid for a property directly reflects
    the benefits of the characteristics of the
    property.
  • Environmental characteristics (clean air, peace,
    quiet and beauty) are traded in the property
    market.
  • The property-value technique derives the value
    for a particular characteristic from the price
    paid for the property.
  • Data are collected on prices paid and
    characteristics of the property.
  • The amount of the price attributable to the
    characteristics is then identified through
    statistical analysis.
  • In essence, if two houses differ in only one
    characteristic, the difference in price is the
    value of that characteristic.

7
Hedonic Pricing
  • Is a property valuation technique used to
    identify how much of a propertys value is due to
    differences in its attributes
  • Is used to infer how much people are willing to
    pay for an improvement in environmental quality
    (see Pearce and Turner, 1990).
  • Environment is just one element of market value
    as there are many factors that influence what
    people will pay for a (rural) property.

8
Hedonic pricing
  • Used to estimate economic values for ecosystem or
    environmental services that directly affect
    market prices.
  • Most commonly applied to variations in housing
    prices that reflect the value of local
    environmental attributes such as amount of open
    space, views to forested hills etc.

9
Factors that influence what people will pay
(rural property).
  • Price affects the ability to generate income.
  • Location A property in a reliable area will
    command a better price than in a marginal area.
  • Climatic factors such as rainfall, temperature,
    frost risk, windiness and sunshine/cloud cover
    will also influence the price of a rural
    property.
  • Enterprise preference Planned land use has some
    effect on land purchase. For example, a wheatbelt
    farmer who wants to continue to grow a cereal
    crop will value central wheatbelt light soil more
    highly than heavy soil.
  • Proximity Closeness to markets or delivery
    points, and if the land is adjoining a buyers
    farm are considered.
  • Size Small parcels of land can attract higher
    prices as this is affordable
  • Current economic climate. (Source Herbert,
    1993)

10
Hedonics for biodiversity valuation
  • Can be used to estimate values based on actual
    choices eg property markets.
  • It is versatile, and can be adapted to consider
    several possible interactions between market
    goods and environmental quality.
  • However, outside influences, like taxes, interest
    rates, or other factors can affect the market.

11
When to use it
  • Are differences between property values due to
    differences in their environments?
  • How much of a property's value is due to a
    particular environmental characteristic?
  • What compensation should be paid to landholders
    who preserve woodland?
  • Monetary values needed for the benefits (soil
    conservation) and costs (land degradation).

12
Prerequisites for the Application of Hedonics
  • the existence of equilibrium in the market under
    study.
  • adequate sample sizes.

13
Hedonic Estimate using Dummy Variables
  • This is a standard hedonic approach to constant
    quality price indexing.
  • The model is based on cross sectional data.
  • The model estimates log of price as the dependent
    variable against an array of dummy variables for
    each quarter and an array of property attributes.

14
Using Proxies (Hedonic Pricing)
  • This method assumes that the value of parts of
    the environment can be found by considering the
    prices of market substitutes.
  • For example a lake that is used for fishing,
    boating and swimming might be valued by what
    people spend on private fishing, boating and
    swimming facilities.
  • Another market substitute commonly used is
    property values. The idea is that houses in a
    polluted area will be worth less than houses in a
    non-polluted area and part of the difference in
    house prices will reflect the value the market
    puts on clean air.
  • Differences in property values will also arise
    for other reasons such as quality of
    accommodation and accessibility to the central
    business district or public transport routes.
  • The analyst has to work out what part of the
    difference is due to the environmental
    differences and infer from that how much people
    are willing to pay for improved environmental
    quality.

15
Environmental uses
  • Other proxies might include differences in water
    rates, where higher rates are levied to cover
    better waste-water treatment of effluent going
    into a river. The extra cost to ratepayers is a
    proxy for the value of a cleaner river.
  • The value of time environmentalists spend
    fighting to protect an area can also be used as a
    proxy for what they think its worth. Working out
    what their time is worth is also tricky. If
    someone earns more money in their job, does that
    mean their spare time is worth more?

16
Strengths
  • the ability to derive money values
  • the use of actual market prices
  • the use of actual changes in environmental
    characteristics.

17
Weaknesses
  • need for a competitive property market in which
    to collect data
  • buyers and sellers must bargain to arrive at a
    final price
  • buyers and sellers must be aware of the
    environmental characteristics
  • These characteristics must be bought and sold as
    part of the properties.

18
Theoretical validity
  • technique is also restricted to cases where the
    environmental effects affect price.
  • technique applies willingness to pay/accept and
    opportunity cost.
  • users of these techniques have refined the
    procedures and interpretations, but these
    techniques require careful and skilled
    management.

19
Market validity
  • uses actual prices and costs from actual
    exchanges in market places.
  • Apart from the proxy-good technique, the
    surrogate is directly and causally related to the
    environmental effect of interest.
  • As with travel-cost, property-value and
    wage-differential techniques are all supported by
    market tests

20
Non-Market Valuation
  • Noise - Changes in noise level can lead to
    changes in enjoyment of an environment. When the
    noise levels are sufficiently high, they will
    impose costs on individuals and decrease house
    and land values.
  • Abelson (1979) related the land value associated
    with houses in the Marrickville and Rockdale
    suburbs of Sydney to noise level and other
    characteristics such as house size. The average
    unimproved land value of a house block at the
    time was 10 000 in Marrickville and 14 000 in
    Rockdale.
  • Land size - and shape of the block were the most
    important determinants of land value
  • environmental factors - including road access,
    quality of view and noise, were also significant
    determinants
  • E.g. a one unit increase in aircraft noise,
    decreased land values by between 540 and 840
    (Marrickville) and 300 (Rockdale).

21
Revealed preference techniques for biodiversity
valuation
  • Mitigatory or preventative expenditure approaches
  • Replacement cost
  • Production function technique or
    change-in-productivity technique
  • Travel cost method
  • Hedonic pricing

22
Replacement cost
  • To measure the cost of land degradation to shire
    councils, monetary values can be estimated for
    the benefits of conservation and flood protection
    and the costs of land degradation (eg. cost of
    damaged roads).

23
Non-Use Benefits
  • This approach does not strictly estimate the
    value of biodiversity benefits.
  • It is a surrogate approach, because it estimates
    costs associated with providing substitutes or
    avoiding loss.
  • not ideal for fully valuing biodiversity, but can
    be useful for providing an initial estimate.

24
Revealed preference techniques
  • When market data are available for goods and
    services that are in some specific way related to
    the biodiversity value in question, such as the
    relationship between the costs of travel and the
    number of people visiting a national park and
    these data can be used to infer values.
  • This approach is called revealed preference and
    a number of different techniques have been
    developed.

25
Usage
  • Other than the travel cost technique, these
    methods are not used much for biodiversity
    valuation in Australia.
  • Of the most promising techniques for valuing
    biodiversity the hedonic pricing technique and
    the production function method have had very
    little application.
  • The usefulness of these techniques could be
    improved by better biophysical knowledge (for the
    production function method) and better market
    data collection and analysis (the hedonic pricing
    technique).

26
Case Studies
  • Increase in soil conservation were found to be
    associated with increase in the value of farms in
    Manilla Shire, New South Wales (King and Sinden
    1988).
  • The increase in value were attributed to
    conservation's role in improving aesthetics,
    maintaining farm access and improving long-term
    sustainability of output.
  • Retention of woodland on farms may enhance the
    naturalness of the environment, aesthetic quality
    and biodiversity but it may also lower farm land
    value.

27
Higher or Lower Values?
  • Reynolds (1978) estimated the loss in property
    value for increase in area retained and for
    increments in naturalness, aesthetic and
    biodiversity for a region of northern New South
    Wales. These losses are one measure of the cost
    of preservation of woodland.
  • Extension of a water supply pipeline to farms in
    Western Australia would benefit farm households
    as well as farm production activities. Coelli et
    al.(1991) valued these benefits as the increase
    in property value.

28
  • A South Australian study used Hedonic Pricing in
    an attempt to establish Statewide and regional
    models of market values for rural properties with
    remnant vegetation and to determine the effect of
    covenants on market values since the introduction
    of the Native Vegetation Act 1984 (Marano, 1998).
  • Results suggested that remnant native vegetation
    does not have a significant effect on property
    prices.
  • Hedonic pricing, using estimates of unimproved
    capital value rather than actual sales, was used
    (Reynolds, 1978) to relate the naturalness and
    scenic quality of vegetation with rural property
    values in NSW. It was found that land value
    decreased with increases in vegetation cover.
  • Contingent valuation, where people are asked what
    they are willing to pay for a benefit and/or what
    they are willing to receive as compensation, was
    used in a recent study to assess the non-market
    values of remnant native vegetation in NSW and
    Victoria (Lockwood and Walpole, 1999). Results
    indicated that participants would be willing to
    pay to conserve native vegetation in these areas.

29
Validity of Hedonics
  • Is doubted because of perceived biases in the
    questioning (Pearce and Turner, 1990) and
    practical difficulties of implemention (Common,
    1995).
  • Lally (1998) recommends the use of a values jury
    to determine non-use values (a proxy system to
    determine value and participants are asked to
    consider the responses as representatives of the
    community) and use value (public amenity),
    inclusive of market value.
  • Until a more concise way of measuring non-use
    value is established, these methods will remain
    unused by most valuation practitioners Lally
    (1998) .
  • These methods will continue to be discussed and
    developed amongst the valuation industry and
    economists (Lally, 1998), but are unlikely to be
    used in the near future.
  • This is because the non-market valuation is not
    based on easily accessible and objective data
    (Lally, 1999).
  • More objective data may eventually be obtained
    through the emerging markets for environmental
    services.
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