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- Title
The Use (and Abuse) of Meta-Analysis in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics: An Assessment.
- Authors
Nelson, Jon P.; Kennedy, Peter E.
- Abstract
Motivated by the 2006 report of a Work Group appointed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), this paper examines the present state of meta-analysis in environmental economics and offers recommendations for its future use. To this end we summarize and assess 140 meta-analyses from 125 published and unpublished studies, covering 17 topical categories in environmental and resource economics. First, we provide several generic meta-analysis models as reference points and discuss major estimation issues. Five econometric issues are identified as part of a complete analysis: (1) sample selection criteria; (2) basic data summary; (3) primary data heterogeneity; (4) heteroskedasticity; and (5) non-independence of multiple observations from primary studies. Second, a tabular summary is presented for the 140 meta-analyses with respect to estimation methods. Third, a narrative summary is presented for 19 meta-analyses, including the three value-of-statistical-life studies examined by the EPA Work Group and one analysis from each of 16 other categories. Fourth, we offer a set of “best practice” guidelines for future meta-analyses in this and other areas of economics. Last, the paper comments on the use of meta-analytic methods for benefit transfers of environmental values.
- Subjects
UNITED States; META-analysis; ENVIRONMENTAL economics; UNITED States. Environmental Protection Agency; ECONOMETRIC models; WILLINGNESS to pay; HETEROGENEITY; MULTILEVEL models; OUTLIERS (Statistics)
- Publication
Environmental & Resource Economics, 2009, Vol 42, Issue 3, p345
- ISSN
0924-6460
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10640-008-9253-5