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The economic value of improved air quality in urban Africa: a contingent valuation survey in Douala, Cameroon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2014

Hermann Pythagore Pierre Donfouet
Affiliation:
CREM, UMR 6211, University of Rennes I, 7 Place Hoche, 35 065 Rennes Cedex, France. E-mail: donfouetz@yahoo.fr
Joseph Cook
Affiliation:
Evans School of Public Affairs, University of Washington, USA. E-mail: jhcook@u.washington.edu
P. Wilner Jeanty
Affiliation:
Kinder Institute for Urban Research & Hobby Center for the Study of Texas, Rice University, USA. E-mail: pwjeanty@rice.edu

Abstract

This study investigates the effects of ‘time to think’ and ‘ballot box’ on willingness-to-pay, while providing the first empirical evidence on assessing the benefits of an air quality improvement program in urban Africa. Our hypothetical referendum scenario proposes to reduce the air pollution related morbidity rate in Douala, Cameroon by 25 per cent in exchange for a one-time surcharge on the electricity bill of each respondent. We find that on average WTP decreases by nearly one-fourth when allocating respondents time to think but markedly increases when we use a ‘ballot box’ approach allowing respondents to state their willingness privately. Our results suggest that on average households are willing to pay US$0.42 per month (0.2 per cent of household annual income). We conclude that total citywide benefits are unlikely to exceed the costs of implementing such a program at this point, although this situation may change quickly with increasing economic growth.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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