The efficiency-equity trade-off, self-interest, and moral principles in health and safety valuation

被引:8
作者
Arroyos-Calvera, Danae [1 ,3 ]
Covey, Judith [2 ]
Loomes, Graham [1 ]
McDonald, Rebecca [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Warwick, Warwick Business Sch, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England
[2] Univ Durham, Dept Psychol, South Rd, Durham DH1 3LE, England
[3] Univ Birmingham, Dept Econ, Edgbaston B15 2SB, England
基金
英国经济与社会研究理事会;
关键词
Efficiency; Equity; Self-interest; Moral principles; CONTEXT-FREE EXPERIMENTS; PREFERENCES; FAIRNESS; ALTRUISM; UTILITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112477
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Policy makers try to take account of public preferences when making trade-offs between policy options. Yet most estimates of the value of health and safety reflect only individuals' self-interested preferences, neglecting their preferences over the distribution of public resources. We conduct an experiment in which participants choose between policy options that differ in their efficiency (expected number of fatalities or cases of ill health they would prevent) and their equity (defined in terms of the balance of risk reductions for different sections of the population). The policy options were framed as interventions to improve a hypothetical city's water supply that would reduce the risk of death or ill health for people in different areas of the city to varying degrees. In order to examine whether self-interest would affect the trade-offs, we asked half of the sample about scenarios where they would personally benefit from some options. Our results suggest that efficiency is the most important single factor determining preferences between policy options, but decisions were influenced almost as much by equity as by efficiency. The effect of self-interest was smaller than that of the general concern for efficiency. We also elicited participants' stated moral principles regarding trade-offs between equity, efficiency and self-interest, and found that their expressed principles were well-aligned with their choices. Our findings contribute to the growing evidence that distributional concerns matter when evaluating health interventions.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 31 条
[1]   Patients' self-interested preferences: Empirical evidence from a priority setting experiment [J].
Alvarez, Begoila ;
Rodriguez-Miguez, Eva .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2011, 72 (08) :1317-1324
[2]   Is there a role for benefit-cost analysis in environmental, health, and safety regulation? [J].
Arrow, KJ ;
Cropper, ML ;
Eads, GC ;
Hahn, RW ;
Lave, LB ;
Noll, RG ;
Portney, PR ;
Russell, M ;
Schmalensee, R ;
Smith, VK ;
Stavins, RN .
SCIENCE, 1996, 272 (5259) :221-222
[3]  
Bergstrom Theodore C., 1999, J. of Public Economic Theory, V1, P71, DOI DOI 10.1111/1097-3923.00004
[4]   A nonparametric elicitation of the equity-efficiency trade-off in cost-utility analysis [J].
Bleichrodt, H ;
Doctor, J ;
Stolk, E .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2005, 24 (04) :655-678
[5]   Inquiry into the Relationship between Equity Weights and the Value of the QALY [J].
Bobinac, Ana ;
van Exel, N. Job A. ;
Rutten, Frans F. H. ;
Brouwer, Werner B. F. .
VALUE IN HEALTH, 2012, 15 (08) :1119-1126
[6]   ERC: A theory of equity, reciprocity, and competition [J].
Bolton, GE ;
Ockenfels, A .
AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2000, 90 (01) :166-193
[7]   The effects of financial incentives in experiments: A review and capital-labor-production framework [J].
Camerer, CF ;
Hogarth, RM .
JOURNAL OF RISK AND UNCERTAINTY, 1999, 19 (1-3) :7-42
[8]   On the contingent valuation of safety and the safety of contingent valuation: Part 2 - The CV/SG "chained" approach [J].
Carthy, T ;
Chilton, S ;
Covey, D ;
Hopkins, L ;
Jones-Lee, M ;
Loomes, G ;
Pidgeon, N ;
Spencer, A .
JOURNAL OF RISK AND UNCERTAINTY, 1998, 17 (03) :187-213
[9]   The measurement of individual utility and social welfare [J].
Dolan, P .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 1998, 17 (01) :39-52
[10]   Whose preferences count? [J].
Dolan, P .
MEDICAL DECISION MAKING, 1999, 19 (04) :482-486