Should We Trust Hypothetical Referenda? Test and Identification Problems

Johansson-Stenman, Olofswe
Carlsson, Fredrikswe
Department of Economicsswe
2006-01-24swe
2007-02-09T11:14:55Z
2007-02-09T11:14:55Z
2006swe
In a paper published in the Journal of Political Economy, Cummings et al. experimentally compare hypothetical and real-money referenda. They reject the incentive compatibility hypothesis of hypothetical referenda. However, in a comment, Haab et al. claim that the hypothesis cannot be rejected if one corrects for heteroskedasticity. In this note we show that the methodology used by Haab et al. is flawed, and their conclusions unwarranted. Our results rather support the original conclusion that hypothetical referenda appears not to resemble real referenda (unless one has reasons to believe that the true variance is much larger in the hypothetical case). This paper outlines design and identification difficulties arising when statistically comparing real and hypothetical referenda.swe
12 pagesswe
68660 bytes
application/pdf
4630swe
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Lawswe
1403-2465swe
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/2730
enswe
Working Papers in Economics, nr 189swe
Hypothetical referendaswe
incentive compatibilityswe
non-market valuationswe
identificationswe
Economicsswe
Should We Trust Hypothetical Referenda? Test and Identification Problemsswe
Reportswe

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