4.7 Article

Deliberative monetary valuation (DMV): Issues in combining economic and political processes to value environmental change

Journal

ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
Volume 63, Issue 4, Pages 690-699

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2007.02.014

Keywords

environmental values; citizens' juries; social costs and benefits; stated preferences; value articulating institutions

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This paper explores and contrasts the different social processes of valuation now appearing as economic means of valuing the environment. Monetary valuation via stated preference approaches has been criticised for assuming well formed and informed preferences and excluding a range of sustainability concerns such as rights, fairness and equity. Deliberative monetary valuation (DMV) in small groups is a novel hybrid of economic and political approaches which raises the prospect of a transformative and moralising experience. Critics of standard contingent valuation approaches have advocated this as offering a way forward. However there has been a lack of clarity as to the means of obtaining values, the expected outcomes and their role. Moving to group settings of deliberation raises concepts of social willingness to pay and accept which are distinct from an aggregate of individual value, although this does not seem to have been widely recognised. A new classification of values is presented appropriate to the literature trying to merge economic and political processes. Values associated with the individual may be exchange values, charitable contributions or fair prices, while social values can be speculative, expressive or arbitrated. The use of DMV is shown to result in different values due to variations in the institutional setting and process of valuation.

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