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Measuring the Monetary Value of Social Relations: a Hedonic Approach By: Bogatkina Maria Illarionov Alexander Mkrtchyan Liana Vagin Andrey 10 th April 2014

Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

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Page 1: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Measuring the Monetary Value of Social Relations:

a Hedonic Approach

By: Bogatkina Maria

Illarionov Alexander Mkrtchyan Liana

Vagin Andrey !

10th April 2014

Page 2: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Table of content1. Introduction

2. Data

3. Methods

4. Results

4.1. The Monetary Price of Social Relations

4.2. Monetary Index of Quality of Relational Life

4.3. Quality of Relational Life and Subjective Well-Being

Page 3: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Introduction

Page 4: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Focus on economic value of social relations

The first application based on hedonic prices, to obtaina direct measurement of the monetary value of social relations.

Page 5: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Indicators

time spent with friends

active participation in associations

frequency of going out for leisure activities

Page 6: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Find

Households are willing to pay a positive and significant monetary price to live in cities where people spend more time with their friends.

Page 7: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Use

The estimated amenity prices to construct a monetary index of quality of relational life and compare it with other dimensions of overall quality of life.

Page 8: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Examine

The relationship between quality of life and subjective well-being, in order to assess the consistency between objective and subjective measures of well-being.

Page 9: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Data

Page 10: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Sample

based on 4 micro-level data sets covering 103 Italian provinces on an annual basis between 2001 and 2010

focus on cities defined as the municipalities of province capitals

information on social relations and local amenities

information on the housing market and the labor market

Page 11: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Descriptive statistics, social relations (individual level)

Page 12: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Indicators of social relations, by city

Page 13: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Descriptive statistics, amenities (city-level)

Page 14: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Methods

Page 15: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Methodology

The monetary value of social relations can be estimated by looking at the effects of relational amenities on house price and wage differentials across cities.

Page 16: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Results

Page 17: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

The Monetary Price of Social Relations

Page 18: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Increase real house priceshigh frequency of meetings with friends

increase in the percentage of individuals who participate actively in volunteering activities

in cities with higher temperature, lower humidity and lower average precipitations

in cities with higher teacher-pupil ratio, better transport and cultural infrastructure

in cities located on the coast, with less pollution and more green areas

in cities with lower crime and unemployment rates and higher population density

Page 19: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Full implicit prices of amenities (euro per year)

Page 20: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Findingsthe implicit prices from the housing equation are generally substantially larger than those from the wage equation

beneficial amenities have positive monetary prices (temperature in January, coastal location, green areas, transport and culture infrastructure, urban density)

while the opposite holds for dis-amenities (precipitation, humidity, air pollution, crime and unemployment)

Page 21: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Monetary Index of Quality of Relational Life

Page 22: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Calculation

A monetary index of quality of relational life (QoRL) for Italian cities is obtained by multiplying the value of each relational amenity in each city by the corresponding full implicit prices.

Page 23: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Monetary index of quality of relational life

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The most of big cities are in the bottom of listRank City Index

1 Ascoli Piceno 3879

71 Bologna -657

80 Milan -887

81 Turin -904

82 Bergamo -923

89 Florence -1124

99 Rome -1492

Page 25: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

Quality of Relational Life and Subjective Well-Being

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Quality of Relational Life and Subjective Well-Being

• the QoL index for society, that includes crime rate, urban density and unemployment rate, is positively and significantly related to high satisfaction with life

• satisfaction with the environment is significantly lower in cities where the quality of services is higher

• satisfaction with economic conditions is lower where the quality of the environment is higher

• the quality of relational life index is positively and significantly associated to satisfaction with health and, most importantly, to satisfaction with relations with friends

Page 27: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach
Page 28: Measuring the monetary value of social relations: a hedonic approach

References

Colombo E., Stanca L., Measuring the Monetary Value of Social Relations: a Hedonic Approach, 2013