Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality

In this paper, we employ the choice experiment method to estimate local citizens' valuation of a public intervention that proposes to improve the quality of an important environmental resource, namely, the Ganges River in India. To elicit citizens' willingness to pay (WTP) higher municipality taxes...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Birol, Ekin, Das, Sukanya
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152615
_version_ 1855529001015050240
author Birol, Ekin
Das, Sukanya
author_browse Birol, Ekin
Das, Sukanya
author_facet Birol, Ekin
Das, Sukanya
author_sort Birol, Ekin
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In this paper, we employ the choice experiment method to estimate local citizens' valuation of a public intervention that proposes to improve the quality of an important environmental resource, namely, the Ganges River in India. To elicit citizens' willingness to pay (WTP) higher municipality taxes for an intervention that proposes to improve the quantity and quality of wastewater treated by the local sewage treatment plant (STP), 150 randomly selected citizens of the municipality of Chandernagore, located on the banks of the Ganges River in West Bengal, were interviewed. The findings reveal that almost all (98 percent) of the citizens value the quality of the water and the environment in the Ganges, though a great majority (90 percent) protested the intervention by not choosing the improved STP scenario in at least one of the eight hypothetical markets in which they were asked to participate. When asked their reasons for not preferring the improved scenarios, 92 percent of them stated that they do not trust the authorities to efficiently and effectively manage the funds generated through additional taxes. The protest responses were controlled for with the use of the nested logit model (NLM). The results reveal that the citizens are willing to pay significant amounts to ensure that the intervention takes place and that an improved STP treats larger amounts of wastewater to a higher quality before discharging it to the Ganges. Therefore, to improve the wastewater management services and the related environmental quality in the water bodies into which treated wastewater is deposited, the municipalities could rely—at least to some extent—on their citizens' WTP higher taxes for provision of improved services. To capture this WTP, however, municipalities' performance, trustworthiness, and accountability, as well as the citizens' perceptions of these, should be improved.
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace152615
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2010
publishDateRange 2010
publishDateSort 2010
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1526152025-11-06T06:36:27Z Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality Birol, Ekin Das, Sukanya experimentation willingness to pay sewage plants logit analysis In this paper, we employ the choice experiment method to estimate local citizens' valuation of a public intervention that proposes to improve the quality of an important environmental resource, namely, the Ganges River in India. To elicit citizens' willingness to pay (WTP) higher municipality taxes for an intervention that proposes to improve the quantity and quality of wastewater treated by the local sewage treatment plant (STP), 150 randomly selected citizens of the municipality of Chandernagore, located on the banks of the Ganges River in West Bengal, were interviewed. The findings reveal that almost all (98 percent) of the citizens value the quality of the water and the environment in the Ganges, though a great majority (90 percent) protested the intervention by not choosing the improved STP scenario in at least one of the eight hypothetical markets in which they were asked to participate. When asked their reasons for not preferring the improved scenarios, 92 percent of them stated that they do not trust the authorities to efficiently and effectively manage the funds generated through additional taxes. The protest responses were controlled for with the use of the nested logit model (NLM). The results reveal that the citizens are willing to pay significant amounts to ensure that the intervention takes place and that an improved STP treats larger amounts of wastewater to a higher quality before discharging it to the Ganges. Therefore, to improve the wastewater management services and the related environmental quality in the water bodies into which treated wastewater is deposited, the municipalities could rely—at least to some extent—on their citizens' WTP higher taxes for provision of improved services. To capture this WTP, however, municipalities' performance, trustworthiness, and accountability, as well as the citizens' perceptions of these, should be improved. 2010 2024-10-01T13:55:02Z 2024-10-01T13:55:02Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152615 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Birol, Ekin; Das, Sukanya. 2010. Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1043. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152615
spellingShingle experimentation
willingness to pay
sewage plants
logit analysis
Birol, Ekin
Das, Sukanya
Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality
title Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality
title_full Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality
title_fullStr Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality
title_full_unstemmed Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality
title_short Valuing the environment in developing countries: Modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities' ability to deliver public services on the citizens' willingness to pay for improved environmental quality
title_sort valuing the environment in developing countries modeling the impact of distrust in public authorities ability to deliver public services on the citizens willingness to pay for improved environmental quality
topic experimentation
willingness to pay
sewage plants
logit analysis
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152615
work_keys_str_mv AT birolekin valuingtheenvironmentindevelopingcountriesmodelingtheimpactofdistrustinpublicauthoritiesabilitytodeliverpublicservicesonthecitizenswillingnesstopayforimprovedenvironmentalquality
AT dassukanya valuingtheenvironmentindevelopingcountriesmodelingtheimpactofdistrustinpublicauthoritiesabilitytodeliverpublicservicesonthecitizenswillingnesstopayforimprovedenvironmentalquality