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Center for Policy Research

Working Paper

Behavioral Bias in Occupational Fatality Risk: Theory, Evidence, and Implications

Perry Singleton

: C.P.R. Working Paper No. 242

November 2021

ABSTRACT Behavioral bias in occupational fatality risk is introduced to the theoretical framework of hedonic wages, yielding an endogenous risk ceiling that increases social welfare. Empirically, bias is most evident among workers with no high school diploma, who do not report relatively greater exposure to death in high fatality rate occupations. These findings suggest that extant population estimates of value of statistical life are biased downwards and should be factored by at least 1.35. Under reasonable assumptions, simulations suggest an optimal risk ceiling between 73.0 to 85.9 percentile of the population distribution of occupational fatality risk.

Perry Singleton

Perry Singleton


Center for Policy Research
426 Eggers Hall