Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-11T08:41:48.216Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Willingness to Pay for a Potential Insurance Policy: Case Study of Trout Aquaculture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2016

Saleem Shaik
Affiliation:
Department of Agribusiness and Applied Economics at North Dakota State University in Fargo
Keith H. Coble
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics at Mississippi State University in Mississippi State
Darren Hudson
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics at Mississippi State University in Mississippi State
James C. Miller
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics at Mississippi State University in Mississippi State
Terrill R. Hanson
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics at Mississippi State University in Mississippi State
Stephen H. Sempier
Affiliation:
Gulf of Mexico Regional Research Planning Coordinator for the Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium at the University of Southern Mississippi and is based in Mississippi State
Get access

Abstract

Using trout producer survey data and the contingent valuation method, we estimate willingness to pay for a potential insurance policy. The survey was conducted in 2005 across the United States; 268 producers completed the survey instrument, resulting in a response rate of 81 percent. Design of the contingent valuation method takes into account two coverage levels and four premium rates. Using standard willingness-to-pay techniques, we assess the premium rate that producers with varying practices and regions are willing to pay for two different coverage levels of insurance. In general, trout producers appear willing to pay premium rates of 2 to 11 percent for these coverage levels.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alberini, A., Cropper, M., Krupnick, A., and Simon, N.B. 2006. “Willingness to Pay for Mortality Risk Reductions: Does Latency Matter?Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 32(3): 231245.Google Scholar
Alfnes, F., and Rickertsen, K. 2003. “European Consumers’ Willingness to Pay for U.S. Beef in Experimental Auction Markets.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 85(2): 396405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arrow, K., Solow, R., Portney, R., Leamer, E., Radner, R., and Schman, H. 1993. “Report of the NOAA Panel on Contingent Valuation.” Federal Register 58(10): 46014614.Google Scholar
Barnett, B.J., and Skees, J.R. 1995. “Region and Crop Specific Models of the Demand for Federal Multiple Peril Crop Insurance.” Journal of Insurance Issues 18(2): 4765.Google Scholar
Beattie, J., Covey, J., Dolan, P., Hopkins, L., Jones-Lee, M., Loomes, G., Pidgeon, N., Robinson, A., and Spencer, A. 1998. “On the Contingent Valuation of Safety and the Safety of Contingent Valuation: Part 1: Caveat Investigator.” Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 17(1): 526.Google Scholar
Carson, R., Flores, N., and Meade, N. 2001. “Contingent Valuation: Controversies and Evidence.” Environmental and Resource Economics 19(2): 173210.Google Scholar
Carson, R., and Groves, T. 2001. “Incentive and Informational Properties of Incentive Questions.” Environmental and Resource Economics 37(1): 181210.Google Scholar
Champ, P.A., Alberini, A., and Correas, I. 2005. “Using Contingent Valuation to Value a Noxious Weeds Control Program: The Effects of Using an ‘Unsure’ Response Category.” Ecological Economics 55(1): 4760.Google Scholar
Champ, P.A., and Bishop, R.C. 2006. “Is Willingness to Pay for a Public Good Sensitive to the Elicitation Format?Land Economics 82(2): 162173.Google Scholar
Champ, P.A., Boyle, K., and Brown, T.C. 2003. A Primer on Non-Market Valuation. Norwell, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Coble, K.H, and Knight, T.O. 2002. “Crop Insurance as a Tool for Price and Yield Risk Management.” In Just, R.E. and Pope, R.D., eds., A Comprehensive Assessment of the Role of Risk in U.S. Agriculture. Norwell, MA: Kluwer Publishers.Google Scholar
Coble, K.H., Knight, T.O., Pope, R.D., and Williams, J.R. 1996. “Modeling Farm-Level Crop Insurance Demand with Panel Data.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 78(2): 439447.Google Scholar
Glauber, J.W. 2004. “Crop Insurance Reconsidered.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 86(5): 11791195.Google Scholar
Golan, E., and Kuchler, F. 1999. “Willingness to Pay for Food Safety: Costs and Benefits of Accurate Measures.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 81 (5): 11851191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodwin, B.K. 1993. “An Empirical Analysis of the Demand for Crop Insurance.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 75(2): 425434.Google Scholar
Hammitt, J.K., and Graham, J.D. 1999. “Willingness to Pay for Health Protection: Inadequate Sensitivity to Probability?Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 18(1): 3362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hinshaw, J.M., Fornshell, G., and Kinnunen, R. 2004. “A Profile of the Aquaculture of Trout in the United States.” Available at http://www.agecon.msstate.edu/Aquaculture/pubs/Trout_Profile.pdf.Google Scholar
Hite, D., Hudson, D., and Intarapapong, W. 2002. “Willingness to Pay for Water Quality Improvements: The Case of Precision Application Technology.” Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics 27(2): 433449.Google Scholar
McFadden, D. 1994. “Contingent Valuation and Social Choice.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 76(4): 689708.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mishra, A., and Goodwin, B.K. 2003. “Adoption of Crop versus Revenue Insurance: A Farm-Level Analysis.” Agricultural Finance Review 63(2): 143155.Google Scholar
Moon, W., Florkowski, W.J., Bruckner, B., and Schonhof, I. 2002. “Willingness to Pay for Environmental Practices: Implications for Eco-labeling.Land Economics 78(1): 88102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
NASS [see National Agricultural Statistics Service].Google Scholar
National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). 2007. “Trout Production (2007).NASS, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. Available at http://usda.mannlib.comell.edu/usda/nass/TrouProd//2000s/2007/TrouProd-02-26-2007.pdf.Google Scholar
Patrick, G.F. 1988. “Mallee Wheat Farmers’ Demand for Crop and Rainfall Insurance.” Australian Journal of Agricultural Economics 32(1): 3749.Google Scholar
Schnitkey, G.D., Sherrick, B.J., and Irwin, S.H. 2003. “Evaluation of Risk Reductions Associated with Multi-Peril Crop Insurance Products.” Agricultural Finance Review 63(1): 121.Google Scholar
Serra, R., Goodwin, B.K., and Featherstone, A.M. 2003. “Modeling Changes in the U.S. Demand for Crop Insurance During the 1990s.Agricultural Finance Review 63(2): 109125.Google Scholar
Shaik, S., and Atwood, J.A. 2003. “Demand for Optional Units in Crop Insurance.” Selected paper presented at the 2003 annual meetings of the American Agricultural Economics Association in Montreal, Quebec.Google Scholar
Shaik, S., Coble, K.H., and Knight, T.O. 2005. “Revenue Insurance Demand.” Selected paper presented at the 2005 annual meetings of the American Agricultural Economics Association in Providence, RI.Google Scholar
Sherrick, B.J., Barry, P.J., Ellinger, P.N., and Schnitkey, G.D. 2004. “Factors Influencing Farmers’ Crop Insurance Decisions.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 86(1): 103114.Google Scholar
Smith, V.H., and Baquet, A. 1996. “The Demand for Multiple Peril Crop Insurance: Evidence from Montana Wheat Farms.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 78(1): 189210.Google Scholar
Spash, C.L. 2006. “Non-Economic Motivation for Contingent Values: Rights and Attitudinal Beliefs in the Willingness to Pay for Environmental Improvements.” Land Economics 82(4): 602622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, H. 1997. “Treatment of ‘Don't Know’ Responses in Contingent Valuation Surveys: A Random Valuation Model.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 32(2): 219232.Google Scholar