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Hauptverfasser: Mankaï, Selim, Marchand, Sébastien, Le, Ngoc Ha
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2024
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.16375
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author Mankaï, Selim
Marchand, Sébastien
Le, Ngoc Ha
author_facet Mankaï, Selim
Marchand, Sébastien
Le, Ngoc Ha
contents The demand for voluntary insurance against low-probability, high-impact risks is lower than expected. To assess the magnitude of the demand, we conduct a meta-analysis of contingent valuation studies using a dataset of experimentally elicited and survey-based estimates. We find that the average stated willingness to pay (WTP) for insurance is 87% of expected losses. We perform a meta-regression analysis to examine the heterogeneity in aggregate WTP across these studies. The meta-regression reveals that information about loss probability and probability levels positively influence relative willingness to pay, whereas respondents' average income and age have a negative effect. Moreover, we identify cultural sub-factors, such as power distance and uncertainty avoidance, that provided additional explanations for differences in WTP across international samples. Methodological factors related to the sampling and data collection process significantly influence the stated WTP. Our results, robust to model specification and publication bias, are relevant to current debates on stated preferences for low-probability risks management.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2402_16375
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Valuing insurance against small probability risks: A meta-analysis
Mankaï, Selim
Marchand, Sébastien
Le, Ngoc Ha
Risk Management
Methodology
The demand for voluntary insurance against low-probability, high-impact risks is lower than expected. To assess the magnitude of the demand, we conduct a meta-analysis of contingent valuation studies using a dataset of experimentally elicited and survey-based estimates. We find that the average stated willingness to pay (WTP) for insurance is 87% of expected losses. We perform a meta-regression analysis to examine the heterogeneity in aggregate WTP across these studies. The meta-regression reveals that information about loss probability and probability levels positively influence relative willingness to pay, whereas respondents' average income and age have a negative effect. Moreover, we identify cultural sub-factors, such as power distance and uncertainty avoidance, that provided additional explanations for differences in WTP across international samples. Methodological factors related to the sampling and data collection process significantly influence the stated WTP. Our results, robust to model specification and publication bias, are relevant to current debates on stated preferences for low-probability risks management.
title Valuing insurance against small probability risks: A meta-analysis
topic Risk Management
Methodology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.16375