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Article
The Value of a Statistical Life: Evidence from Panel Data
Center for Policy Research
  • Thomas J. Kniesner, Syracuse University
  • W. Kip Viscusi, Vanderbilt University
  • Christopher Woock, The Conference Board
Description/Abstract

Our research addresses fundamental long-standing concerns in the compensating wage differentials literature and its public policy implications: the econometric properties of estimates of the value of statistical life (VSL) and the wide range of such estimates from about $0 to almost $30 million. Here we address most of the prominent econometric issues by applying panel data, a new and more accurate fatality risk measure, and systematic application of panel data estimators. Controlling for measurement error, endogeneity, latent individual heterogeneity that may be correlated with the regressors, state dependence, and sample composition yields an estimated value of a statistical life of about $7 million–$12 million, which we show can clarify greatly the cost-effectiveness of regulatory decisions. We show that probably the most important econometric issue is controlling for latent heterogeneity; less important is how one does it.

Document Type
Working Paper
Date
3-1-2010
Keywords
  • Panel data,
  • fixed effects,
  • random effects,
  • long-differences,
  • PSID
Language
English
Series
Working Papers Series
Disciplines
Additional Information

Working paper no. 122

Harvest from RePEc at http://repec.org

Source
Metadata from RePEc
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Citation Information
Thomas J. Kniesner, W. Kip Viscusi and Christopher Woock. "The Value of a Statistical Life: Evidence from Panel Data" (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/w_kip_viscusi/75/