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Eliciting preferences for urban parks

The hedonic pricing method has been used extensively to obtain implicit prices for availability of urban green space, but few have obtained households' preference parameters. We elicit preferences and estimate willingness to pay functions for park availability in Copenhagen using an approach th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Regional science and urban economics 2018-11, Vol.73, p.127-142
Main Authors: Panduro, Toke Emil, Jensen, Cathrine Ulla, Lundhede, Thomas Hedemark, von Graevenitz, Kathrine, Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The hedonic pricing method has been used extensively to obtain implicit prices for availability of urban green space, but few have obtained households' preference parameters. We elicit preferences and estimate willingness to pay functions for park availability in Copenhagen using an approach that places identifying restrictions on the utility function. We do this for two different measures of park availability and examine sources of preference heterogeneity. We find that the implicit price of another hectare of park within a 1000 m radius is 53.25 EUR per ha per year for the average apartment corresponding to an increase in annual rent of 0.33% per additional ha. For reducing distance to the nearest park by a meter, the price is 0.59 EUR per meter per year, corresponding to an increase in annual rent of 0.03‰ per meter. We apply our results to a policy scenario reducing the park area available in an area of central Copenhagen and show how estimates of aggregate welfare changes are highly sensitive to the measure of park availability applied. The findings stress the importance of paying attention to how public goods are defined when undertaking welfare economic policy analyses. •We identify preferences for parks in a second stage hedonic house price analysis.•Another hectare of park within a 1000 m radius is worth 53.25 EUR per ha per year.•Reducing distance to the nearest park by a meter is worth 0.59 EUR per meter per year.•We find substantial heterogeneity in preferences across households.•The measure of park availability should be chosen with care by the researcher, as it may be critical to policy evaluations.
ISSN:0166-0462
1879-2308
DOI:10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2018.09.001