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Choice set formation for outdoor destinations: The role of motivations and preference discrimination in site selection for the management of public expenditures on protected areas
Institution:1. PhD Student, Department of Civil and Resource Engineering, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, B3J 2X4, Canada;2. PhD Candidate, Department of Civil and Resource Engineering, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, B3J 2X4, Canada;3. Associate Professor, School of Planning and Department of Civil and Resource Engineering, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, B3J 2X4, Canada
Abstract:Effective public expenditure currently dominates the management focus of many protected areas. This calls for explicit modeling of constraints and motivations that, respectively, obstruct and stimulate visits to selected outdoor destinations. Choice set formation is the result of screening and/or inclusion of specific sites (alternatives) to form the set of sites considered in real choices. Evidence shows that the omission of a structural representation of choice set formation is harmful to econometric inference. Yet, the literature has largely ignored the underlying behavioral phenomenon. We show, using a discrete choice experiment involving selection among seven recreational sites in an Italian national park, that choice set formation is behaviorally relevant, even after controlling for preference discrimination. Motivations (why visit?) are important determinants of preliminary site screening for choice set inclusion, as well as site selection, justifying the additional value of such modeling extension.
Keywords:Discrete choice modeling  Demand for outdoor recreation  Site selection  Travel choice  Nonmarket valuation  Choice set formation  Efficient public expenditure  Local finance
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