The Influence of Projected Outcomes on Preferences over Alternative Regulations: Evidence from a Recreational Fishery
Document Type
Article
Date of Original Version
1-1-2022
Abstract
The expected outcomes arising from alternative policies on respondent choice have not been sufficiently accounted for in stated preference studies. We accordingly develop a framework to quantitatively assess the influence of outcome provision and illustrate with a choice experiment in a recreational fishery. The application suggests that participants are more likely to choose the status quo and low-cost options when outcomes are not provided, and these conservative behaviors might reflect the higher dispersion in anglers’ utility in tautog (Tautoga onitis) fishing. Further investigations with latent class models suggest that the outcome provision makes a significant share of respondents changing their choice pattern
Publication Title, e.g., Journal
Land Economics
Volume
98
Issue
4
Citation/Publisher Attribution
Chen, Zhenshan, Pengfei Liu, Eric T. Schultz, Jacob M. Kasper, and Stephen K. Swallow. "The Influence of Projected Outcomes on Preferences over Alternative Regulations: Evidence from a Recreational Fishery." Land Economics 98, 4 (2022). doi: 10.3368/le.98.4.102820-0164R1.