TY - JOUR
T1 - Valuing the cultural services of a forest protected area in Southwestern China
T2 - The roles of online deliberation and sample selection
AU - Chen, Haojie
AU - Sloggy, Matthew R.
AU - Costanza, Robert
AU - Kubiszewski, Ida
AU - Zhang, Tong
AU - Wu, Luhua
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/8
Y1 - 2025/8
N2 - Deliberation – the process of group discussion and consideration – has been increasingly integrated to valuation of ecosystem services. In an online stated preference survey on the Fanjing Mountain National Nature Reserve in the Southwestern China, we assessed participants' willingness to pay (WTP) for cultural services (non-material benefits gained through interacting with nature, including its ecological and geological elements and characteristics) before and after deliberation. However, among the initial participants, only a subset completed deliberation and the full survey. This dropout of participants may occur in any deliberation-based valuation survey, introducing sample selection bias for estimating the impacts of deliberation. To control sample selection bias, we applied the Heckman correction approach which uses the probability of a given observation being included in the sample based on its other observed characteristics. Overall, deliberation led to a more concentrated distribution of WTP and reduced the effects of sociodemographic drivers of WTP. Deliberation also had varied impacts on different participants' WTP, including increases, decreases, and no change. The median WTP remained unchanged, although the mean WTP became significantly lower after deliberation (even when controlling for sample selection bias that significantly influenced the effects of deliberation). The use value of the Reserve's cultural services for visitors was estimated at approximately 520 million CNY per year based on the pre-deliberation mean WTP, and 314 million CNY based on the post-deliberation mean WTP. This value reflects the Reserve's natural, cultural, and economic significance and the need for continued support for both nature conservation and sustainable tourism management.
AB - Deliberation – the process of group discussion and consideration – has been increasingly integrated to valuation of ecosystem services. In an online stated preference survey on the Fanjing Mountain National Nature Reserve in the Southwestern China, we assessed participants' willingness to pay (WTP) for cultural services (non-material benefits gained through interacting with nature, including its ecological and geological elements and characteristics) before and after deliberation. However, among the initial participants, only a subset completed deliberation and the full survey. This dropout of participants may occur in any deliberation-based valuation survey, introducing sample selection bias for estimating the impacts of deliberation. To control sample selection bias, we applied the Heckman correction approach which uses the probability of a given observation being included in the sample based on its other observed characteristics. Overall, deliberation led to a more concentrated distribution of WTP and reduced the effects of sociodemographic drivers of WTP. Deliberation also had varied impacts on different participants' WTP, including increases, decreases, and no change. The median WTP remained unchanged, although the mean WTP became significantly lower after deliberation (even when controlling for sample selection bias that significantly influenced the effects of deliberation). The use value of the Reserve's cultural services for visitors was estimated at approximately 520 million CNY per year based on the pre-deliberation mean WTP, and 314 million CNY based on the post-deliberation mean WTP. This value reflects the Reserve's natural, cultural, and economic significance and the need for continued support for both nature conservation and sustainable tourism management.
KW - Cultural ecosystem service
KW - Deliberative valuation
KW - Ecosystem service valuation
KW - Inverse mills ratio
KW - Preference
KW - Public participation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105005496807
U2 - 10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103526
DO - 10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103526
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105005496807
SN - 1389-9341
VL - 177
JO - Forest Policy and Economics
JF - Forest Policy and Economics
M1 - 103526
ER -