Title of article
Parental altruism and the value of avoiding acute illness: are kids worth more than parents? Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Mark Dickie، نويسنده , , Victoria L. Messman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
29
From page
1146
To page
1174
Abstract
A model describing parents’ preferences to relieve their own and their childrenʹs acute illnesses is estimated using stated-preference data. Estimated marginal rates of substitution (MRS) between child and parent illness are about two, indicating that parents value childrenʹs illness attributes twice as highly as their own. The MRS is larger for younger children, falls toward unity as the child approaches adulthood, and appears to reflect parental altruism rather than parent–child differences in initial health or illness costs. Intra-family allocations may compensate for chronic health impairments. Parents’ willingness to pay to avoid own or child illness increases with income, declines with fertility, increases at a decreasing rate with duration and number of symptoms, and depends on perceived discomfort and activity restrictions. Current methods of assessing morbidity benefits of environmental regulations may understate substantially the value of childrenʹs health, particularly in African-American families.
Keywords
Family economics , Children’s health , Health valuation , Altruism , Benefit–cost analysis , environmental justice , environmental policy , Morbidity valuation , Willingness to pay
Journal title
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Record number
689583
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