Document Type
Article
Department
Economics (CMC)
Publication Date
2008
Abstract
This paper considers the factors responsible for differences with age in estimates of the wage compensation an individual requires to accept increased occupational fatality risk. We derive a relationship between the value of a statistical life (VSL) and the degree of complementarity between consumption and labor supplied when health status serves as a potential source of variation in this relationship. Our empirical analysis finds that variations in an individual’s health status or quality of life and anticipated longevity threats lead to significant differences in the estimated wage/risk tradeoffs. We describe how extensions to the specification of hedonic wage models, including measures for quality of life and anticipated longevity threats, help to explain the diversity in past studies examining how the estimated wage–risk tradeoff changes with age.
Rights Information
© 2008 Springer
Terms of Use & License Information
DOI
10.1007/s10640-008-9197-9
Recommended Citation
Evans, Mary F. and V. Kerry Smith, Complementarity and the Measurement of Individual Risk Tradeoffs: Accounting for Quantity and Quality of Life Effects, Environmental and Resource Economics, 41(3): 381-400, 2008