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Measuring the Willingness to Pay for Tap Water Quality Improvements: Results of a Contingent Valuation Survey in Pusan

Authors
Kwak, So-YoonYoo, Seung-HoonKim, Chang-Seob
Issue Date
Dec-2013
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
tap water quality improvement; contingent valuation; willingness to pay; one-and-one-half bounded; spike model
Citation
WATER, v.5, no.4, pp.1638 - 1652
Journal Title
WATER
Volume
5
Number
4
Start Page
1638
End Page
1652
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/14104
DOI
10.3390/w5041638
ISSN
2073-4441
Abstract
With increasing concern regarding health, people have developed an interest in the safety of drinking water. In this study, we attempt to measure the economic benefits of tap water quality improvement through a case study on Pusan, the second largest city in Korea. To this end, we use a scenario that the government plans to implement a new project of improving water quality and apply the contingent valuation (CV) method. A one-and-one-half bounded dichotomous choice question (OOHBDC) format is employed to reduce the potential for response bias in multiple-bound formats such as the double-bound model, while maintaining much of the efficiency. Moreover, we employ the spike model to deal with zero willingness to pay (WTP) responses from the OOHBDC CV survey. The CV survey of 400 randomly selected households was rigorously designed to comply with the guidelines for best-practice CV studies using person-to-person interviews. From the spike OOHBDC CV model, the mean WTP for the improvement was estimated to be KRW 2,124 (USD 2.2), on average, per household, per month. The value amounts to 36.6% of monthly water bill and 20.2% of production costs of water. The conventional OOHBDC model produces statistically insignificant mean WTP estimate and even negative value, but the OOHBDC spike model gives us statistically significant mean WTP estimate and fitted our data well. The WTP value to Pusan residents can be computed to be KRW 31.2 billion (USD 32.1 million) per year.
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