Randomized Safety Inspections and Risk Exposure on the Job: Quasi-experimental Estimates of the Value of a Statistical Life

Title: Randomized Safety Inspections and Risk Exposure on the Job: Quasi-experimental Estimates of the Value of a Statistical Life
Format: Journal Article
Publication Date: November 2019
Published In: American Economic Journal
Description:

The value of a statistical life (VSL) is a critical driver of estimated benefits for federal policies designed to improve human health, safety, and environmental exposures. The vast majority of empirical evidence on the magnitude of the VSL arises from hedonic wage models that have been plagued by measurement error and omitted variables. To address these limitations, this paper employs randomly assigned workplace safety inspections to instrument for plant-level risks in a quasi-experimental design. We provide credible causal evidence for the existence of compensating wages for fatality risks and estimate a VSL between $(2016)8 million and $(2016)10 million.

Ivan Allen College Contributors:
External Contributors: Joanathan Lee
Citation:

Lee, Jonathan M., and Laura O. Taylor. 2019. "Randomized Safety Inspections and Risk Exposure on the Job: Quasi-experimental Estimates of the Value of a Statistical Life." American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 11 (4): 350-74.DOI: 10.1257/pol.20150024

Related Departments:
  • School of Economics