Are rural residents willing to trade-off higher noise for lower air pollution? Evidence from revealed preferences
Fecha
2023Resumen
The rise in urbanization has led to an expansion of traditional urban externalities toward suburban and rural
areas together with changes in the preferences of human populations for noise and air pollution. This paper
analyses the preferences of the population living in rural, suburban and urban areas for noise and air pollution
utilizing a revealed preference approach. Data on actual choices of residential location are analysed utilizing a
Latent Class Discrete Choice model that raises two different groups of residents with different preferences for air
and noise pollution. As expected and confirmed by the Multinomial and Mixed Logit models, the first group of the
Latent Class model accepts higher levels of noise and air pollution in urban than in suburban and rural areas.
However, the second group of residents have preferences for higher levels of noise and lower levels of air
pollution in rural and suburban than in urban areas. Thus, results show some rural residents are willing to trade
higher levels of noise for lower levels of air pollution, indicating adaptation of preferences to a lower level of the
traditional tranquillity enjoyed in less densely populated rural areas.