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How unobservable productivity biases the value of a statistical life

How unobservable productivity biases the value of a statistical life

Thomas J. Kniesner

About this book

"A prominent theoretical controversy in the compensating differentials literature concerns unobservable individual productivity. Competing models yield opposite predictions depending on whether the unobservable productivity is safety-related skill or productivity generally. Using five panel waves and several new measures of worker fatality risks, first-difference estimates imply that omitting individual heterogeneity leads to overestimates of the value of statistical life, consistent with the latent safety-related skill interpretation. Risk measures with less measurement error raise the value of statistical life, the net effect being that estimates from the static model range from $5.3 million to $6.7 million, with dynamic model estimates somewhat higher"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.

Details

OL Work ID
OL23987835W

Subjects

Human lifeValuation

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.