2007
DOI: 10.1007/s11166-006-9002-5
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The value of mortality risk reductions in Delhi, India

Abstract: Road accidents kill nearly 1.2 million people each year worldwide, two-thirds of whom live in developing countries. Traffic crashes may indeed become the third leading cause of death in developing countries by the year 2020 (Murray and Lopez, 1996). For governments in developing countries to make informed decisions about investments in traffic safety, it is imperative that the benefits of road traffic improvements be monetized and compared with costs. This, however, requires estimates of the value of reduction… Show more

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Cited by 94 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
(94 reference statements)
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“…As for age and status-quo preference, there is no significant relationship observed in Afsin-Elbistan and Ankara; but in Kutahya-Tavsanli, we confirmed a weak evidence of a U-shaped relationship, as an individual's age increases the preference for status-quo decreases, but after age 41, it becomes less as she/he gets older. This finding coincides with the one in Bhattacharya et al [10]. In Afsin-Elbistan and Kutahya-Tavsanli, the higher the respondents’ household income is, the less likely the status-quo option is preferred.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…As for age and status-quo preference, there is no significant relationship observed in Afsin-Elbistan and Ankara; but in Kutahya-Tavsanli, we confirmed a weak evidence of a U-shaped relationship, as an individual's age increases the preference for status-quo decreases, but after age 41, it becomes less as she/he gets older. This finding coincides with the one in Bhattacharya et al [10]. In Afsin-Elbistan and Kutahya-Tavsanli, the higher the respondents’ household income is, the less likely the status-quo option is preferred.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Although our estimated VSL is higher than the VSL estimated in developing countries such as in China ($4000–$17,000 in 1999 USD [4], $34,458 in 1998 USD [11]) and India ($150,000, PPP adjusted 2005 USD, [10]), it is significantly lower than the estimates for developed countries such as $7.4 million (in 2006 USD), the recommended value by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for USA [6] and $ 2.9 million in 2002 USD for Japan estimated by Tsuge et al [17]. Our estimate is slightly more than one-fourth of the value adopted by the European Environment Agency (EEA), that is 1.4 million Euro in 2000 Euros (approximately $1.34 million in 2000 USD or $1.72 million in 2012 USD) [7].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 62%
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