Economic Benefits of Preserving Healthy Ecosystems
Steve ColtInstitute of Social and Economic
ResearchUniversity of Alaska Anchorage
Stampede Summit 21 April 2005
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Preview:
• What on Earth is Value?• Price is not a four-letter word• The great divide….
– Between price and cost• Public lands are the answer—
– But what was the question?• Wild values: measuring ecosystem
services• Sleeping with porcupines
– Using the numbers
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What on Earth is “Value” ?
•Value is subjective– “There is no accounting for taste”
• Value is determined partly by:– Circumstances (water in the desert)– Skills and interests (piano, to
Beethoven)– Income
• Markets reveal value• Economists try to measure value
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Price: Value in the Marketplace
• Prices are determined by the interaction of buyers and sellers
• Buyers compare Their Subjective Value to “the price”
• Sellers compare their incremental cost to “the price”
5Forest buys but Siggy does not…..
Juan values the good more than Tupak (we don’t know why!)
price
quantity
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Abe has a lower production cost than Cecil (we don’t know why!)
Dee produces but Efrin does not
price
quantity
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“the price” is determined by the “Twin Scissors” of buyers and
sellers
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Price is not a four-letter word!
• When markets work:– Price = Cost– Value exceeds cost to everyone who
decides to buy– That’s good for society – we produce
as much, but not more, than people want. (xmas comparison)
– Price signals what must be given up to get something
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How Markets Work for Conservation:
• Prices send signals• High price encourages
conservation• High price encourages substitution• High price encourages innovation
– What happened to the impending “copper crisis”?
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Example: Market for Carbon Emissions
• EU Market for Carbon Dioxide emission rights opened January 2005
• The market price of one ton of CO2 is……– 10 Euro = $14 – This equates to 14 cents per gallon of
fuel.– Is this really going to wreck the
economy?
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The Great Divide – between price and cost
• When I drove to Denali today, I emitted 200 kg of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
• Who bears this cost?– Everyone!
• This is a negative spillover or a “negative externality”
• The cost of driving (to society!) exceeds the price of driving (to me!)
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Your examples, please:
• Glitter Gulch – each new development gets all the benefits and spreads the cost of sprawl among all others.
• Dog poop – why pick up my dog’s when I am headed “down the trail”?
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When markets fail:
• Social cost (of climate change) (of congestion) exceeds private cost to the driver– Market for driving generates too much
driving– There is no market for carbon
emissions!
• Private benefit of overfishing exceeds private cost, but total benefit is far less than total cost
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0
2
4
6
8
10
Private Total
benefit
private cost
external cost
The Tragedy of the Commons“The pursuit of freedom in a Commons
brings ruin to all” (Garrett Hardin)
Big negative externality – like depletion of a fishery
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Public Lands are the Answer – but what was the question?
Why have collective ownership of healthy ecosystems?– (Think about this for a few moments)
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Why Collective Ownership?
• Healthy ecosystems provide “ecosystem services”– Clean air, Clean water, Climate– Recreation, hunting, fishing– My consumption does not reduce your
consumption (within limits)– It is hard to exclude people from
consuming, so private owners cannot charge …(Scenic views!)
– The services are often global-scale
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Types of Global Ecosystem Services
• Biodiversity• Climate• Air• Open ocean fish stocks• Scientific laboratory
• These are all direct USE values for both current and future generations
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In addition,Existence Value:
• I value the knowledge that Blue Whales exist
• American households valued the knowledge that Prince William Sound would not suffer another spill at:$31 per household (median)= $2.8 billion total (for U.S.)
• You can’t sell existence value!– Only a few will privately produce it
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Hence,
• Ecosystem services are often not bought and sold in private markets
• Environmental goods and services must often be provided through collective social processes (politics!)
• We use Politics to translate individual preferences into collective action
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Wild Values: Measuring the value of
ecosystem services
• “The issue of valuation is inseparable from the choices and decisions we have to make about ecological systems”– (Costanza et al 1997)
(Remember – value is subjective)
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What are we Measuring?
• Use Values– Fishing, hunting, recreation– subsistence– ecosystem services (life support)
• Non-use Values– Existence, passive use, Includes
aesthetics, cultural heritage
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How do we do it?
• Actual market prices– Replacement cost
• Market prices of related goods– Hedonic methods
• Observation of behavior– Travel Cost
• Ask people– Contingent Valuation
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Using Market Prices: ExampleReplacement Cost of
Subsistence
• 53.5 million lbs harvested• 100+ % of protein needs in rural
Alaska• Replacement cost = ?? $4 per lb• Replacement value = 53.5 x 4 =
$214 million
– Source: ADFG 1998 “Subsistence Update”
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Example: Using Market PricesValue of Worldwide Ecosystem
Services
• Nutrient Cycling $17 trillion / yr• Waste treatment $2.3 trillion / yr• Water regulation & supply $2.9 trillion / yr• Gas regulation $1.3 trillion / yr• Recreation $0.8 trillion /yr• Cultural benefits $3.0 trillion / yr
• TOTAL = $33 trillion /yr• Compare to gross world product of $18
trillion / yr
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Example: Hedonics
• Land Values in Mat Su Valley• Berman (1987) regression
equation• Value of parcels declines with
distance from Anchorage• Value of parcels declines with
number of close neighbors• Value of parcels increases with
proximity to public open space
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Example: Observed BehaviorValue of Alaska Fish
• Example of TC Data:– I live at the fishing site, TC=0, make 6
trips– Brother lives ten miles away, TC = 10,
make 3 trips– Cousin lives 20 miles away, TC = 20,
makes zero trips
• Draw Graph, infer value
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Example: Observed BehaviorValue of Alaska Big Game
• ADF&G used survey data to estimate TC models for hunting trips
• Net values estimated by species and by resident / nonresident status
• Total net value of hunted species in year 2000 = $23.5 million
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Example: Observed BehaviorValue of Alaska Fish
• ISER Results (1993):– People Actually paid: $550 million– People were willing to pay an
additional $186 million to fish– $186 million is the net economic
value of the sport fishery
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Contingent Valuation: ask people
• Tentatively endorsed by NOAA Panel
• Quality depends on execution– In-person interviews– Yes-no choices– Clear description of scenario
• Used by “most federal” and “many state” agencies (Carson 1999)
• The ONLY way to measure existence value
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Sleeping with Porcupines: Using the Numbers
• Problems:– Whose values count? (Willingness to
Pay always depends on income)– Reducing complex choices to one
dimension ($)• A Trojan Horse? (Weeden 1987)
• However, no measurement = a value of zero (?)
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• Valuation is one, useful, tool
“We can find ways to use the sharp-edged techniques of economic valuation without cutting our jugulars” (Bob
Weeden 1987)
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Playing the Economic Significance Game
• 84,000 Alaska jobs depend on healthy ecosystems
• $2.6 billion of personal income
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Recreation visits to AK National Parks
Source: http://www2.nature.nps.gov/stats/
avg annual growth = 7.6%
0
500,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
2,000,000
2,500,00019
79
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
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Case Study: Seward Economy(ISER 2001)
• Seward wage and salary employment grew at 3.7% per yr between 1980 and 2000, vs. 2.6% for entire State.
• Kenai Fjords Park visits:
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Denali NP Money Generation (2001):
• 218,085 visitor days in 2001– $22 million total spending– 445 direct average annual jobs
• But this is just time IN the park
Source: Michigan State U, http://www.prr.msu.edu/mgm2/
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Why do People Visit Alaska
Why do People Live in Alaska?
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MGM Appears Conservative:
Source: ISER ANILCA and Seward economy
$23 million
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Don’t be Bamboozled:
• “Total dollars” or “economic activity” numbers should be treated as meaningless until you know what they mean….– New income? Tax revenue? New
payroll?
• “New jobs” in one place may mean lost jobs somewhere else.– Ask about displacement!
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Economic Value in the Long Run
•Ecosystem services – They ain’t making any more of them
•Wilderness – it will grow increasingly scarce
•Existence value – it will grow with population, income, and education
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The Alaska Challenge:• Our healthy ecosystems are
increasingly scarce from a national and global perspective
• However, they are still viewed as relatively abundant by most Alaskans– “I have plenty of wilderness outside my
home in Peters Creek.”
• How to address this challenge is up to you!
We’re all in this together.
~The End
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Statewide National Parks Money Generation: 2003
Alaskavisits 2,189,717 party-days 1,190,438 $/party/day 78 total spending 93 $ milliondirect sales 75 $ milliondirect jobs 2,052 total sales 104 $ milliontotal jobs 2,476
Source: Michigan State U, http://www.prr.msu.edu/mgm2/
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Using Market Prices: ExampleReplacement Cost of
Subsistence
• Reality check against expenditures on inputs:– $3.18 million spent in 3 wildlife refuges– 1.76 million lbs harvested– $3.18/1.76 = $1.81 per lb actually
spent on commercial inputs– Excludes labor by harvesters
– Source: Goldsmith 2000, Colt 2000
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Using Market Prices: ExampleReplacement Cost of Worldwide
Ecosystem Services
• Divide entire world into 16 ecosystem types
• Look at 17 ecosystem functions• What does it cost to replicate
these functions?
– Source: Costanza et al 1997
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Example: Hedonics
• Idea: property values reflect a “bundle of attributes” – safe streets, good schools, nice neighbors, environmental quality,– Hence,
• Variations in property values can be tied to variations in environmental quality
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Example: Observed BehaviorValue of Alaska Fish
(Based on ISER sport fishing study, 1993 data)
• Travel Cost Method (TC)– People incur a travel cost to fish– Those facing higher travel cost make
fewer trips to a given site– Use this relationship between number
of trips and (travel) cost per trip to estimate net economic value of activity
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Example: Observed BehaviorValue of Alaska Fish
• Draw a graph:
- 5
0
5
10
15
20
25
0 2 4 6 8
trips per person
cost
per
tri
p
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Example: Observed BehaviorValue of Alaska Fish
• Assume all three people have similar preferences
• Compute net economic value– Me: between 30 and 60– Brother: between 0 and 15– Cousin: zero
– TOTAL: between 30 and 75
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Example: Observed BehaviorValue of Alaska Fish
• ISER Methodology:– Telephone and mail surveys of more
than 5,000 residents and nonresidents
– Construction of travel costs to multiple sites
– Nested multinomial logit models relate fishing behavior to many variables including travel cost
– Net economic value computed from models
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Net Economic Value of Alaska Big Game(McCollum & Miller 1994, Colt 2000)
Species ResidentNon-
resident ResidentNon-
resident ResidentNon-
resident Total
Black Bear $181 $434 2,807 1,187 0.5 0.5 1.0Brown Bear $246 $718 1,238 1,679 0.3 1.2 1.5Caribou $200 $512 15,685 4,045 3.1 2.1 5.2Moose $214 $465 44,579 3,079 9.6 1.4 11.0Wolf NA $416 248 486 0.2 0.2Sheep $316 $583 - 1,419 0.0 0.8 0.8Goat $149 $497 1,073 179 0.2 0.1 0.2Deer $169 $263 13,456 377 2.3 0.1 2.4Elk $117 $104 908 141 0.1 0.0 0.1Waterfowl $118 $560 7,430 192 0.9 0.1 1.0
All Species $194 $513 87,424 12,782 16.9 6.6 23.5
Net Economic Value ($ million)Net Economic Value per Trip
Number of Trips
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Example: Ask PeopleExistence Value of Prince
William Sound
• State of Alaska, for EVOS trial• 1,043 completed in-person interviews
using nationwide sample• Asked people how much they would pay
to avoid another spill• Used the median value of $31 per
household• $31 x 90.3 million households = $2.8
billion
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Example: Ask PeopleExistence Value of Prince
William Sound
• Construct Scenario – There will be another spill in 10 years…
• Include possible action– Unless we implement the following
plan…
• Ask “Take-it-or-leave-it” questions– Would you pay $15 in higher taxes to
implement the plan
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Example: Ask PeopleExistence Value of Prince
William Sound
• Use different amounts ($5-$250) to elicit range of willingness to pay
• Importance of the proposed payment vehicle– EVOS study used general tax after
considering gasoline tax, higher gasoline prices
– Used lump sum one-time payment
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Problems with Contingent Valuation
• Hypothetical market, not actual transaction– CV estimates understate TC for same
goods• Information effects• Scope effects – Does WTP increase
“correctly” with scope of proposed action?– Recent research suggests scope does
matter as it should
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But,
• These are only the on-site Expenditures….
• Total nonresident visitor spending in AK is approaching $2 billion– (based on $1.5 billion for 2001,
summer only, AVSP4)
• About $1,400 per person per trip• How much of this can be attributed
to ANILCA?