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Value of life

The value of life is an economic value used to quantify the benefit of avoiding a fatality.[1] It is also referred to as the cost of life, value of preventing a fatality (VPF), implied cost of averting a fatality (ICAF), and value of a statistical life (VSL). In social and political sciences, it is the marginal cost of death prevention in a certain class of circumstances. In many studies the value also includes the quality of life, the expected life time remaining, as well as the earning potential of a given person especially for an after-the-fact payment in a wrongful death claim lawsuit.

As such, it is a statistical term, the value of reducing the average number of deaths by one. It is an important issue in a wide range of disciplines including economics, health care, adoption, political economy, insurance, worker safety, environmental impact assessment, globalization,[2] and process safety.[3][4]

The motivation for placing a monetary value on life is to enable policy and regulatory analysts to allocate the limited supply of resources, infrastructure, labor, and tax revenue. Estimates for the value of a life are used to compare the life-saving and risk-reduction benefits of new policies, regulations, and projects against a variety of other factors,[2] often using a cost-benefit analysis.[3]

Estimates for the statistical value of life are published and used in practice by various government agencies. In Western countries and other liberal democracies, estimates for the value of a statistical life typically range from US$1 millionUS$10 million; for example, the United States FEMA estimated the value of a statistical life at US$7.5 million in 2020.[5]

Treatment in economics and methods of calculation edit

There is no standard concept for the value of a specific human life in economics. However, when looking at risk/reward trade-offs that people make with regard to their health, economists often consider the value of a statistical life (VSL). The VSL is very different from the value of an actual life. It is the value placed on changes in the likelihood of death, not the price someone would pay to avoid certain death. This is best explained by way of an example. From the EPA's website:

Suppose each person in a sample of 100,000 people were asked how much he or she would be willing to pay for a reduction in their individual risk of dying by 1 in 100,000, or 0.001%, over the next year. Since this reduction in risk would mean that we would expect one fewer death among the sample of 100,000 people over the next year on average, this is sometimes described as "one statistical life saved.” Now suppose that the average response to this hypothetical question was $100. Then the total dollar amount that the group would be willing to pay to save one statistical life in a year would be $100 per person × 100,000 people, or $10 million. This is what is meant by the "value of a statistical life.” [6]

This again emphasizes that VSL is more of an estimate of willingness to pay for small reductions in mortality risks rather than how much a human life is worth. Using government spending to see how much is spent to save lives in order to estimate the average individual VSL is a popular method of calculation. The United States government does not have an official value of life threshold, but different values are used in different agencies. It might be that the government values lives quite highly or that calculation standard are not applied uniformly.[7] Using the EPA as an example, the Agency uses estimates of how much people are willing to pay for small reductions in their risks of dying from adverse health conditions that may be caused by environmental pollution in their cost-benefit analyses.[6]

Economists often estimate the VSL by looking at the risks that people are voluntarily willing to take and how much they must be paid for taking them.[8] This method is known as revealed preference, where the actions of the individual reveal how much they value something. In this context, economists would look at how much individuals are willing to pay for something that reduces their chance of dying. Similarly, compensating differentials, which are the reduced or additional wage payments that are intended to compensate workers for conveniences or downsides of a job, can be used for VSL calculations. For example, a job that is more dangerous for a worker's health might require that the worker be compensated more. The compensating differentials method has several weaknesses. One issue is that the approach assumes that people have information, which is not always available. Another issue is that people may have higher or lower perceptions of risk they are facing that do not equate to actual statistical risk. In general, it is difficult for people to accurately understand and assess risk. It is also hard to control for other aspects of a job or different types of work when using this method.[7] Overall, revealed preference may not represent population preferences as a whole because of the differences between individuals.[9]

One method that can be used to calculate VSL is summing the total present discounted value of lifetime earnings. There are a couple of problems using this method. One potential source of variability is that different discount rates can be used in this calculation, resulting in dissimilar VSL estimates. Another potential issue when using wages to value life is that the calculation does not take into account the value of time that is not spent working, such as vacation or leisure.[10] As a result, VSL estimates may be inaccurate because time spent on leisure could be valued at a higher rate than an individual's wage.[7]

Another method used to estimate VSL is contingent valuation. Contingent valuation asks individuals to value an option either that they have not chosen or are unable to currently choose.[7] Economists might estimate the VSL by simply asking people (e.g. through questionnaires) how much they would be willing to pay for a reduction in the likelihood of dying, perhaps by purchasing safety improvements.[11] These types of studies are referred to as stated preference studies. However, contingent valuation has some flaws. The first problem is known as the isolation of issues, where participants may give different values when asked to value something alone versus when they are asked to value multiple things. The order of how these issues are presented to people matters as well.[7] Another potential issue is the “embedding effect” identified by Diamond and Hausman 1994.[12] All of these methods might result in a VSL that is overstated or understated.

When calculating value of statistical life, it is important to discount and adjust it for inflation and real income growth over the years. An example of a formula needed to adjust the VSL of a specific year is given by the following:

 

where

VSLO = Original Base Year, VSLT = Updated Base Year, PT = Price Index in Year t, IT = Real Incomes in Year t, ε = Income Elasticity of VSL.

Value of Preventing a Casualty edit

Value of Preventing a Casualty (VPC) is a more general concept to value of preventing a fatality.[13] It means the value of preventing a fatality or a serious injury.[14] According to Economic and Social Council's provisional agenda for review and analysis of the economic costs of level crossing accidents,[15] "the value of preventing a casualty should be established by either Willingness-To-Pay or Human Capital/Lost Output approaches. It is essential to consider not only fatal injuries, but also serious (or even minor injuries) in this statistical life valuation exercise."

Comparisons to other methods edit

The value of statistical life (VSL) estimates are often used in the transport sector[16] and in process safety (where it may be coupled with the ALARP concept).[4] In health economics and in the pharmaceutical sector, however, the value of a quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) is used more often than the VSL. Both of these measures are used in cost-benefit analyses as a method of assigning a monetary value of bettering or worsening one's life conditions. While QALY measures the quality of life ranging from 0–1, VSL monetizes the values using willingness-to-pay.[17]

Researchers have first attempted to monetize QALY in the 1970s, with countless studies being done to standardize values between and within countries. However, as with the QALY, VSL estimates have also had a history of vastly differing ranges of estimates within countries, notwithstanding a standardization among countries. One of the biggest movements to do so was the EuroVaQ project which used a sample of 40,000 individuals to develop the WTP of several European countries.[18]

Policy applications edit

Value of life estimates are frequently used to estimate the benefits added due to a new policy or act passed by the government. One example is the 6-year retroactive study on the benefits and costs of the 1970 Clean Air Act[clarification needed] in the period from 1970 to 1990. This study was commissioned by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Office of Air and Radiation and Office of Policy, Planning and Evaluation, but was carried out by an independent board of public health experts, economists, and scientists headed by Dr. Richard Schmalensee of MIT.[19]

On conducting the benefit-cost analysis, the team measured each dollar value of an environmental benefit by estimating a how many dollars a person is willing to pay in order to decrease or eliminate a current threat to their health, otherwise known as their "willingness-to-pay" (WTP). The WTP of the U.S. population was estimated and summed for separate categories including mortality, chronic bronchitis, hypertension, IQ changes, and strokes. Thus, the individual WTPs were added to get the value of a statistical life (VSL) for each category considered in the valuation of the act's benefits.[20] Each valuation in figure 1 was the product of several studies which compiled both solicited WTP information from individuals and estimated WTP estimates from risk compensation demanded in the current labor market and was averaged to find a singular VSL. Such data from the labor market was taken from the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.[21]

For example, the valuation estimates used for mortality were divided by the typical life expectancy of each survey sample in order to get a dollar estimate per life-year lost or saved which was discounted with a 5 percent discount rate.[22]

Using these estimates, the paper concluded that the benefits, ranging from $5.6 to $49.4 trillion in 1990 dollars, of implementing the Clean Air Act from 1970 to 1990 outweighed the economic costs of $523 billion in 1990 dollars.[23]

Uses edit

Knowing the value of life is helpful when performing a cost-benefit analysis, especially in regard to public policy. In order to decide whether or not a policy is worth undertaking, it is important to accurately measure costs and benefits. Public programs that deal with things like safety (i.e. highways, disease control, housing) require accurate valuations in order to budget spending.[24]

Since resources are finite, trade-offs are inevitable, even regarding potential life-or-death decisions. The assignment of a value to individual life is one possible approach to attempting to make rational decisions about these trade-offs.

When deciding on the appropriate level of health care spending, a typical method is to equate the marginal cost of the health care to the marginal benefits received.[25] In order to obtain a marginal benefit amount, some estimation of the dollar value of life is required. One notable example was found by Stanford professor Stefanos Zenios, whose team calculated the cost-effectiveness of kidney dialysis. His team found that the VSL implied by then current dialysis practice averages about US$129,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY).[26] This calculation has important implications for health care as Zenios explained:

"That means that if Medicare paid an additional $129,000 to treat a group of patients, on average, group members would get one more quality-adjusted life year."[27]

In risk management activities such as in the areas of workplace safety, and insurance, it is often useful to put a precise economic value on a given life. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration under the Department of Labor sets penalties and regulations for companies to comply with safety standards to prevent workplace injuries and deaths.[28] It can be argued that these high penalties are intended to act as a deterrent so that companies have an incentive to avoid them. As such, the price of the fines would have to be roughly equivalent to the value of a human life. Although some studies of the effectiveness of fines as a deterrent have found mixed results.[29]

In transportation modes it is very important to consider the external cost that is paid by the society but is not calculated, for making it more sustainable. The external cost, although consisting of impacts on climate, crops and public health among others, is largely determined by impacts on mortality rate.

Estimates of the value of life edit

Equivalent parameters are used in many countries, with significant variation in the value assigned.[2]

 
International VSL with data values[disputed ]

European Union edit

Fall back VP in 2016 ERA in €[14]
Country Fatality Serious Injury Slight injury
Austria 3,601,014 569,387 43,974
Belgium 3,582,968 550,056 42,488
Bulgaria 1,728,479 242,133 18,703
Croatia 2,541,972 355,636 27,459
Czech Republic 3,028,481 428,346 33,055
Denmark 3,988,844 622,286 48,084
Estonia 2,921,585 416,085 32,124
Finland 3,248,716 517,252 39,987
France 3,122,352 486,856 37,628
Germany 3,455,179 539,346 41,660
Greece 2,326,951 356,127 27,527
Hungary 2,761,351 383,034 29,559
Ireland 5,085,099 747,910 57,709
Italy 3,248,106 501,498 38,735
Latvia 2,338,370 337,234 26,049
Lithuania 2,697,114 389,643 30,071
Luxembourg 6,491,289 996,412 76,843
Netherlands 3,550,348 543,938 42,020
Norway 3,402,766 573,324 44,341
Poland 2,412,823 341,458 26,356
Portugal 2,541,032 385,934 29,815
Romania 2,443,038 339,588 26,203
Slovakia 2,846,309 404,481 31,222
Slovenia 2,425,302 364,655 28,182
Spain 3,019,875 458,207 35,392
Sweden 3,296,192 520,782 40,270
Switzerland 4,422,265 759,440 58,666
United Kingdom 2,873,899 481,459 37,222
EU average 3,273,910 498,591 38,514

Sweden edit

In Sweden, the value of a statistical life has been estimated from 9 to 98 million SEK (€0.9 - 10.6 million).[30]

  • 34.6 million SEK (€3.7 million) mean of studies in Sweden from 1995 and on
  • 23 million SEK (€2.5 million) median of studies in Sweden from 1995 and on
  • 22 million SEK (€2.4 million) recommended by official authorities

Australia edit

In Australia, the value of a statistical life has been set at:

  • AU$5.4 million (2023)[1]
  • AU$235,000 per year (2023)

India edit

Using a hedonic wage approach, the VSL in India among blue-collar male workers in manufacturing industries of Ahmedabad, Gujarat has been estimated to be 44.69 million INR ($0.64 million) in 2018.[31]

New Zealand edit

In New Zealand, the value of a statistical life has been set at:

  • NZ$2 million (1991) by NZTA[32]
  • NZ$3.85 million (2013) by The Treasury[33]
  • NZ$4.14 million (2016) by NZTA[32]
  • NZ$4.53 million (June 2019) by Ministry of Transport [34]

Singapore edit

The value of statistical life (VSL) in Singapore was estimated in 2007 via a contingent valuation survey that elicits willingness-to-pay (WTP) for mortality risk reductions, which interviewed 801 Singaporeans and Singapore Permanent Residents aged 40 and above, entailing a value of statistical life of approximately S$850,000 to S$2.05 million (in 2007 S$, which is approximately 1.36 S$ in 2022). Mean WTP was also shown to have an inverse relationship with age, and is about 20% lower for persons aged 70 and older. Consistent with existing literature, the study also finds that mean WTP is not affected by physical health; but is affected by mental health. In addition, mean WTP is not affected by covariates such as gender, race, and personal income, but is affected by covariates such as household income, age, occupation and level of education.[35]

For traffic accidents, the WTP-based VSL was estimated in 2008 at S$1.87 million (in 2008 S$, which is approximately 1.27 S$ in 2022). This was also compared against WTP-based VSL estimates in other countries, including 4.63 million for the US, 3.11 million for Sweden, 2.41 million for the UK, 2.38 million for New Zealand and 1.76 million for the EU (in 2008 S$).[36]

The VSL obtained by other methods may differ significantly. For instance, if the VSL is estimated from the World Bank VSL adjusted to country-specific gross domestic product, which reflects a human capital approach, then the VSL in Singapore would be calculated to be US$8.96 million in 2014 (S$11.3 million in 2014, in 2014 S$, which is approximately 1.09 S$ in 2022).[37]

Turkey edit

Studies by Hacettepe University estimated the VSL at about half a million purchasing power parity adjusted 2012 US dollars,[38] the value of a healthier and longer life (VHLL) for Turkey at about 42,000 lira (about $27,600 in PPP-adjusted 2012 USD), and the value of a life year (VOLY) as about 10,300 TL (about $6,800 in PPP-adjusted 2012 USD), all as of 2012.[39]

As of 2016 the estimated produced economic value for a life time for Turkey was US$59,000 which was 5.4 times GDP per capita.[40]

Russia edit

According to different estimates life value in Russia varies from $40,000 up to $2 million. On the results of opinion poll life value (as the cost of financial compensation for the death) in the beginning of 2015 was about $71,500.[41]

United Kingdom edit

As of 2013, the value of preventing a fatal casualty was £1.7m (2013 prices) in UK.[42]

United States edit

The following estimates have been applied to the value of life. The estimates are either for one year of additional life or for the statistical value of a single life.

  • $50,000 per year of quality life (the "dialysis standard",[43] which had been a de facto international standard most private and government-run health insurance plans worldwide use to determine whether to cover a new medical procedure)[44]
  • $129,000 per year of quality life (an update to the "dialysis standard")[45][44]
  • $7.5 million (Federal Emergency Management Agency, Jul. 2020)[5]
  • $9.1 million (Environmental Protection Agency, 2010)[46]
  • $9.2 million (Department of Transportation, 2014)[47]
  • $9.6 million (Department of Transportation, Aug. 2016)[48]
  • $12.5 million (Department of Transportation, 2022)[49]

The income elasticity of the value of statistical life has been estimated at 0.5 to 0.6.[50] Developing markets have smaller statistical value of life.[50] The statistical value of life also decreases with age.[50]

Historically, children were valued little monetarily, but changes in cultural norms have resulted in a substantial increase as evinced by trends in damage compensation from wrongful death lawsuits.[51]

Criticisms edit

The value of a statistical life has come under criticism from a range of sources both in economics and philosophy.[52][53][54][55][56] These criticisms range from concerns with the specific methodology used, to value a statistical life to the very prospect of valuing life and using it in cost benefit analyses.

Concerns with aggregation edit

Some economists have argued that the value of a statistical life should be "disaggregated" to better capture the differences in mortality risk reduction preferences.[53][52] Cass Sunstein and others have argued that the value of a statistical life should vary by type of risks, as people are more concerned about some risks than others, and by individuals, as some people are more risk seeking than others.[57][53] This is proposed to ensure the accuracy of the measurement, as using an average may force some people to pay more than they are willing to for risk reduction, and prevent policies from being enacted for people who are willing to pay more than average for mortality risk reduction.[58]

Concerns with valuing life edit

Some philosophers and policymakers have concerns about the underlying idea of valuing a statistical life at all. While some of these concerns represent a misunderstanding of what is meant by the value of a statistical life, many express concerns with the project of valuing lives.[53][54]Elizabeth Anderson and other philosophers have argued that the methods for measuring the value of a statistical life are insufficiently accurate as they rely on wage studies that are conducted in non-competitive labor markets where workers have insufficient information about their working conditions to accurately determine the risk of death from taking a particular job.[59][55] Further these philosophers contend that some goods (including mortality risk, as well as environmental goods) are simply incommensurate, it is impossible to compare them, and therefore impossible to monetize them and put them on a single scale, making the very practice of valuing a statistical life problematic.[60][55][61]

Economists have responded to the more superficial concerns by advocating renaming or rebranding the value of a statistical life as a "micromort" or the amount someone would be willing to pay to reduce a one in one million risk of death, though philosophers contend that this does not resolve the underlying issues.[54][53]

See also edit

References edit

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  55. ^ a b c Anderson, Elizabeth (1993). Value in ethics and economics. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-93189-0. OCLC 27430064.
  56. ^ John, Stephen David; Curran, Emma J. (2021-03-19). "Costa, cancer and coronavirus: contractualism as a guide to the ethics of lockdown". Journal of Medical Ethics. 48 (9): 643–650. doi:10.1136/medethics-2020-107103. ISSN 0306-6800. PMC 7985975. PMID 33741680.
  57. ^ Sunstein, Cass (2004-11-01). "Valuing Life: A Plea for Disaggregation". Duke Law Journal. 54 (2): 385–445. ISSN 0012-7086. PMID 15940845. First, VSL should vary across risks. For example, people are willing to pay high amounts to avoid cancer risks, and hence there is reason to think that people's VSL is higher for cancer deaths than for sudden, unanticipated deaths. Cancer risks are involved in the work of many regulatory agencies, and people seem to be particularly concerned about such risks, in a way that should produce a high VSL- almost unquestionably higher than the values that agencies now use. More generally, deaths that produce unusual fear, or that are accompanied by high levels of pain and suffering, should be expected to produce a higher VSL. Human beings face countless mortality risks, and it would be truly bizarre to maintain that people value avoiding each of those risks identically. Second, VSL should vary across individuals, simply because different people are willing to pay different amounts to avoid risks. People who are risk averse will be willing to pay more, and will therefore show a higher VSL, than people who are risk-seeking. Those who are rich will show a higher VSL than those who are poor. People who are thirty might well show a higher VSL than people who are sixty. It follows that different demographic groups will show diversity in their VSLs as well.
  58. ^ Carneades (2022). Are All Lives Equal? Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix it. Carneades.org. ISBN 979-8986128610. we should value risks by demographic groups so that if a particular group is more impacted by a risk than another, we can use a more accurate value of a statistical life for that group. This will assure that the government neither imposes undue costs or fails to eliminate risks that individuals would be willing to pay to eliminate.
  59. ^ Ackerman, Frank (2004). Priceless : on knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing. Lisa Heinzerling. ISBN 1-56584-850-0. OCLC 52819812.
  60. ^ Sagoff, Mark (2004). Price, principle, and the environment. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-511-23172-5. OCLC 76951369.
  61. ^ Carneades (25 June 2022). Are All Lives Equal? Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix it. Carneades.org. ISBN 979-8986128610. If there are some goods that cannot be compared, then the project of attempting to monetize all of the benefits and costs for comparison is flawed from the start. If you accept this position, you may have a way out of the original problematic conclusion. If we cannot compare the value of a life and other benefits, then the problem of disparately valued lives comes from trying to convert a life into something with which it cannot be compared: money.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • "Motor Vehicle Accident Costs". US Department of Transportation. 31 October 1994.

value, life, value, life, economic, value, used, quantify, benefit, avoiding, fatality, also, referred, cost, life, value, preventing, fatality, implied, cost, averting, fatality, icaf, value, statistical, life, social, political, sciences, marginal, cost, dea. The value of life is an economic value used to quantify the benefit of avoiding a fatality 1 It is also referred to as the cost of life value of preventing a fatality VPF implied cost of averting a fatality ICAF and value of a statistical life VSL In social and political sciences it is the marginal cost of death prevention in a certain class of circumstances In many studies the value also includes the quality of life the expected life time remaining as well as the earning potential of a given person especially for an after the fact payment in a wrongful death claim lawsuit As such it is a statistical term the value of reducing the average number of deaths by one It is an important issue in a wide range of disciplines including economics health care adoption political economy insurance worker safety environmental impact assessment globalization 2 and process safety 3 4 The motivation for placing a monetary value on life is to enable policy and regulatory analysts to allocate the limited supply of resources infrastructure labor and tax revenue Estimates for the value of a life are used to compare the life saving and risk reduction benefits of new policies regulations and projects against a variety of other factors 2 often using a cost benefit analysis 3 Estimates for the statistical value of life are published and used in practice by various government agencies In Western countries and other liberal democracies estimates for the value of a statistical life typically range from US 1 million US 10 million for example the United States FEMA estimated the value of a statistical life at US 7 5 million in 2020 5 Contents 1 Treatment in economics and methods of calculation 2 Value of Preventing a Casualty 3 Comparisons to other methods 4 Policy applications 5 Uses 6 Estimates of the value of life 6 1 European Union 6 1 1 Sweden 6 2 Australia 6 3 India 6 4 New Zealand 6 5 Singapore 6 6 Turkey 6 7 Russia 6 8 United Kingdom 6 9 United States 7 Criticisms 7 1 Concerns with aggregation 7 2 Concerns with valuing life 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksTreatment in economics and methods of calculation editThere is no standard concept for the value of a specific human life in economics However when looking at risk reward trade offs that people make with regard to their health economists often consider the value of a statistical life VSL The VSL is very different from the value of an actual life It is the value placed on changes in the likelihood of death not the price someone would pay to avoid certain death This is best explained by way of an example From the EPA s website Suppose each person in a sample of 100 000 people were asked how much he or she would be willing to pay for a reduction in their individual risk of dying by 1 in 100 000 or 0 001 over the next year Since this reduction in risk would mean that we would expect one fewer death among the sample of 100 000 people over the next year on average this is sometimes described as one statistical life saved Now suppose that the average response to this hypothetical question was 100 Then the total dollar amount that the group would be willing to pay to save one statistical life in a year would be 100 per person 100 000 people or 10 million This is what is meant by the value of a statistical life 6 This again emphasizes that VSL is more of an estimate of willingness to pay for small reductions in mortality risks rather than how much a human life is worth Using government spending to see how much is spent to save lives in order to estimate the average individual VSL is a popular method of calculation The United States government does not have an official value of life threshold but different values are used in different agencies It might be that the government values lives quite highly or that calculation standard are not applied uniformly 7 Using the EPA as an example the Agency uses estimates of how much people are willing to pay for small reductions in their risks of dying from adverse health conditions that may be caused by environmental pollution in their cost benefit analyses 6 Economists often estimate the VSL by looking at the risks that people are voluntarily willing to take and how much they must be paid for taking them 8 This method is known as revealed preference where the actions of the individual reveal how much they value something In this context economists would look at how much individuals are willing to pay for something that reduces their chance of dying Similarly compensating differentials which are the reduced or additional wage payments that are intended to compensate workers for conveniences or downsides of a job can be used for VSL calculations For example a job that is more dangerous for a worker s health might require that the worker be compensated more The compensating differentials method has several weaknesses One issue is that the approach assumes that people have information which is not always available Another issue is that people may have higher or lower perceptions of risk they are facing that do not equate to actual statistical risk In general it is difficult for people to accurately understand and assess risk It is also hard to control for other aspects of a job or different types of work when using this method 7 Overall revealed preference may not represent population preferences as a whole because of the differences between individuals 9 One method that can be used to calculate VSL is summing the total present discounted value of lifetime earnings There are a couple of problems using this method One potential source of variability is that different discount rates can be used in this calculation resulting in dissimilar VSL estimates Another potential issue when using wages to value life is that the calculation does not take into account the value of time that is not spent working such as vacation or leisure 10 As a result VSL estimates may be inaccurate because time spent on leisure could be valued at a higher rate than an individual s wage 7 Another method used to estimate VSL is contingent valuation Contingent valuation asks individuals to value an option either that they have not chosen or are unable to currently choose 7 Economists might estimate the VSL by simply asking people e g through questionnaires how much they would be willing to pay for a reduction in the likelihood of dying perhaps by purchasing safety improvements 11 These types of studies are referred to as stated preference studies However contingent valuation has some flaws The first problem is known as the isolation of issues where participants may give different values when asked to value something alone versus when they are asked to value multiple things The order of how these issues are presented to people matters as well 7 Another potential issue is the embedding effect identified by Diamond and Hausman 1994 12 All of these methods might result in a VSL that is overstated or understated When calculating value of statistical life it is important to discount and adjust it for inflation and real income growth over the years An example of a formula needed to adjust the VSL of a specific year is given by the following VSLT VSLO PTPO ITIO ϵ displaystyle VSL T VSL O frac P T P O left frac I T I O right epsilon nbsp whereVSLO Original Base Year VSLT Updated Base Year PT Price Index in Year t IT Real Incomes in Year t e Income Elasticity of VSL Value of Preventing a Casualty editValue of Preventing a Casualty VPC is a more general concept to value of preventing a fatality 13 It means the value of preventing a fatality or a serious injury 14 According to Economic and Social Council s provisional agenda for review and analysis of the economic costs of level crossing accidents 15 the value of preventing a casualty should be established by either Willingness To Pay or Human Capital Lost Output approaches It is essential to consider not only fatal injuries but also serious or even minor injuries in this statistical life valuation exercise Comparisons to other methods editThe value of statistical life VSL estimates are often used in the transport sector 16 and in process safety where it may be coupled with the ALARP concept 4 In health economics and in the pharmaceutical sector however the value of a quality adjusted life year QALY is used more often than the VSL Both of these measures are used in cost benefit analyses as a method of assigning a monetary value of bettering or worsening one s life conditions While QALY measures the quality of life ranging from 0 1 VSL monetizes the values using willingness to pay 17 Researchers have first attempted to monetize QALY in the 1970s with countless studies being done to standardize values between and within countries However as with the QALY VSL estimates have also had a history of vastly differing ranges of estimates within countries notwithstanding a standardization among countries One of the biggest movements to do so was the EuroVaQ project which used a sample of 40 000 individuals to develop the WTP of several European countries 18 Policy applications editValue of life estimates are frequently used to estimate the benefits added due to a new policy or act passed by the government One example is the 6 year retroactive study on the benefits and costs of the 1970 Clean Air Act clarification needed in the period from 1970 to 1990 This study was commissioned by the U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA Office of Air and Radiation and Office of Policy Planning and Evaluation but was carried out by an independent board of public health experts economists and scientists headed by Dr Richard Schmalensee of MIT 19 On conducting the benefit cost analysis the team measured each dollar value of an environmental benefit by estimating a how many dollars a person is willing to pay in order to decrease or eliminate a current threat to their health otherwise known as their willingness to pay WTP The WTP of the U S population was estimated and summed for separate categories including mortality chronic bronchitis hypertension IQ changes and strokes Thus the individual WTPs were added to get the value of a statistical life VSL for each category considered in the valuation of the act s benefits 20 Each valuation in figure 1 was the product of several studies which compiled both solicited WTP information from individuals and estimated WTP estimates from risk compensation demanded in the current labor market and was averaged to find a singular VSL Such data from the labor market was taken from the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics 21 For example the valuation estimates used for mortality were divided by the typical life expectancy of each survey sample in order to get a dollar estimate per life year lost or saved which was discounted with a 5 percent discount rate 22 Using these estimates the paper concluded that the benefits ranging from 5 6 to 49 4 trillion in 1990 dollars of implementing the Clean Air Act from 1970 to 1990 outweighed the economic costs of 523 billion in 1990 dollars 23 Uses editKnowing the value of life is helpful when performing a cost benefit analysis especially in regard to public policy In order to decide whether or not a policy is worth undertaking it is important to accurately measure costs and benefits Public programs that deal with things like safety i e highways disease control housing require accurate valuations in order to budget spending 24 Since resources are finite trade offs are inevitable even regarding potential life or death decisions The assignment of a value to individual life is one possible approach to attempting to make rational decisions about these trade offs When deciding on the appropriate level of health care spending a typical method is to equate the marginal cost of the health care to the marginal benefits received 25 In order to obtain a marginal benefit amount some estimation of the dollar value of life is required One notable example was found by Stanford professor Stefanos Zenios whose team calculated the cost effectiveness of kidney dialysis His team found that the VSL implied by then current dialysis practice averages about US 129 000 per quality adjusted life year QALY 26 This calculation has important implications for health care as Zenios explained That means that if Medicare paid an additional 129 000 to treat a group of patients on average group members would get one more quality adjusted life year 27 In risk management activities such as in the areas of workplace safety and insurance it is often useful to put a precise economic value on a given life The Occupational Safety and Health Administration under the Department of Labor sets penalties and regulations for companies to comply with safety standards to prevent workplace injuries and deaths 28 It can be argued that these high penalties are intended to act as a deterrent so that companies have an incentive to avoid them As such the price of the fines would have to be roughly equivalent to the value of a human life Although some studies of the effectiveness of fines as a deterrent have found mixed results 29 In transportation modes it is very important to consider the external cost that is paid by the society but is not calculated for making it more sustainable The external cost although consisting of impacts on climate crops and public health among others is largely determined by impacts on mortality rate Estimates of the value of life editThis section is missing information about value in year 2000 US dollar equivalents currently we have a mix of different nations dollars from different times which isn t easy to compare some way to compare per year QALY value with whole life value Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page October 2021 Equivalent parameters are used in many countries with significant variation in the value assigned 2 nbsp International VSL with data values disputed discuss European Union edit Fall back VP in 2016 ERA in 14 Country Fatality Serious Injury Slight injuryAustria 3 601 014 569 387 43 974Belgium 3 582 968 550 056 42 488Bulgaria 1 728 479 242 133 18 703Croatia 2 541 972 355 636 27 459Czech Republic 3 028 481 428 346 33 055Denmark 3 988 844 622 286 48 084Estonia 2 921 585 416 085 32 124Finland 3 248 716 517 252 39 987France 3 122 352 486 856 37 628Germany 3 455 179 539 346 41 660Greece 2 326 951 356 127 27 527Hungary 2 761 351 383 034 29 559Ireland 5 085 099 747 910 57 709Italy 3 248 106 501 498 38 735Latvia 2 338 370 337 234 26 049Lithuania 2 697 114 389 643 30 071Luxembourg 6 491 289 996 412 76 843Netherlands 3 550 348 543 938 42 020Norway 3 402 766 573 324 44 341Poland 2 412 823 341 458 26 356Portugal 2 541 032 385 934 29 815Romania 2 443 038 339 588 26 203Slovakia 2 846 309 404 481 31 222Slovenia 2 425 302 364 655 28 182Spain 3 019 875 458 207 35 392Sweden 3 296 192 520 782 40 270Switzerland 4 422 265 759 440 58 666United Kingdom 2 873 899 481 459 37 222EU average 3 273 910 498 591 38 514Sweden edit In Sweden the value of a statistical life has been estimated from 9 to 98 million SEK 0 9 10 6 million 30 34 6 million SEK 3 7 million mean of studies in Sweden from 1995 and on 23 million SEK 2 5 million median of studies in Sweden from 1995 and on 22 million SEK 2 4 million recommended by official authoritiesAustralia edit In Australia the value of a statistical life has been set at AU 5 4 million 2023 1 AU 235 000 per year 2023 India edit Using a hedonic wage approach the VSL in India among blue collar male workers in manufacturing industries of Ahmedabad Gujarat has been estimated to be 44 69 million INR 0 64 million in 2018 31 New Zealand edit In New Zealand the value of a statistical life has been set at NZ 2 million 1991 by NZTA 32 NZ 3 85 million 2013 by The Treasury 33 NZ 4 14 million 2016 by NZTA 32 NZ 4 53 million June 2019 by Ministry of Transport 34 Singapore edit The value of statistical life VSL in Singapore was estimated in 2007 via a contingent valuation survey that elicits willingness to pay WTP for mortality risk reductions which interviewed 801 Singaporeans and Singapore Permanent Residents aged 40 and above entailing a value of statistical life of approximately S 850 000 to S 2 05 million in 2007 S which is approximately 1 36 S in 2022 Mean WTP was also shown to have an inverse relationship with age and is about 20 lower for persons aged 70 and older Consistent with existing literature the study also finds that mean WTP is not affected by physical health but is affected by mental health In addition mean WTP is not affected by covariates such as gender race and personal income but is affected by covariates such as household income age occupation and level of education 35 For traffic accidents the WTP based VSL was estimated in 2008 at S 1 87 million in 2008 S which is approximately 1 27 S in 2022 This was also compared against WTP based VSL estimates in other countries including 4 63 million for the US 3 11 million for Sweden 2 41 million for the UK 2 38 million for New Zealand and 1 76 million for the EU in 2008 S 36 The VSL obtained by other methods may differ significantly For instance if the VSL is estimated from the World Bank VSL adjusted to country specific gross domestic product which reflects a human capital approach then the VSL in Singapore would be calculated to be US 8 96 million in 2014 S 11 3 million in 2014 in 2014 S which is approximately 1 09 S in 2022 37 Turkey edit Studies by Hacettepe University estimated the VSL at about half a million purchasing power parity adjusted 2012 US dollars 38 the value of a healthier and longer life VHLL for Turkey at about 42 000 lira about 27 600 in PPP adjusted 2012 USD and the value of a life year VOLY as about 10 300 TL about 6 800 in PPP adjusted 2012 USD all as of 2012 update 39 As of 2016 update the estimated produced economic value for a life time for Turkey was US 59 000 which was 5 4 times GDP per capita 40 Russia edit According to different estimates life value in Russia varies from 40 000 up to 2 million On the results of opinion poll life value as the cost of financial compensation for the death in the beginning of 2015 was about 71 500 41 United Kingdom edit As of 2013 the value of preventing a fatal casualty was 1 7m 2013 prices in UK 42 United States edit The following estimates have been applied to the value of life The estimates are either for one year of additional life or for the statistical value of a single life 50 000 per year of quality life the dialysis standard 43 which had been a de facto international standard most private and government run health insurance plans worldwide use to determine whether to cover a new medical procedure 44 129 000 per year of quality life an update to the dialysis standard 45 44 7 5 million Federal Emergency Management Agency Jul 2020 5 9 1 million Environmental Protection Agency 2010 46 9 2 million Department of Transportation 2014 47 9 6 million Department of Transportation Aug 2016 48 12 5 million Department of Transportation 2022 49 The income elasticity of the value of statistical life has been estimated at 0 5 to 0 6 50 Developing markets have smaller statistical value of life 50 The statistical value of life also decreases with age 50 Historically children were valued little monetarily but changes in cultural norms have resulted in a substantial increase as evinced by trends in damage compensation from wrongful death lawsuits 51 Criticisms editThe value of a statistical life has come under criticism from a range of sources both in economics and philosophy 52 53 54 55 56 These criticisms range from concerns with the specific methodology used to value a statistical life to the very prospect of valuing life and using it in cost benefit analyses Concerns with aggregation edit Some economists have argued that the value of a statistical life should be disaggregated to better capture the differences in mortality risk reduction preferences 53 52 Cass Sunstein and others have argued that the value of a statistical life should vary by type of risks as people are more concerned about some risks than others and by individuals as some people are more risk seeking than others 57 53 This is proposed to ensure the accuracy of the measurement as using an average may force some people to pay more than they are willing to for risk reduction and prevent policies from being enacted for people who are willing to pay more than average for mortality risk reduction 58 Concerns with valuing life edit Some philosophers and policymakers have concerns about the underlying idea of valuing a statistical life at all While some of these concerns represent a misunderstanding of what is meant by the value of a statistical life many express concerns with the project of valuing lives 53 54 Elizabeth Anderson and other philosophers have argued that the methods for measuring the value of a statistical life are insufficiently accurate as they rely on wage studies that are conducted in non competitive labor markets where workers have insufficient information about their working conditions to accurately determine the risk of death from taking a particular job 59 55 Further these philosophers contend that some goods including mortality risk as well as environmental goods are simply incommensurate it is impossible to compare them and therefore impossible to monetize them and put them on a single scale making the very practice of valuing a statistical life problematic 60 55 61 Economists have responded to the more superficial concerns by advocating renaming or rebranding the value of a statistical life as a micromort or the amount someone would be willing to pay to reduce a one in one million risk of death though philosophers contend that this does not resolve the underlying issues 54 53 See also editALARP Disability adjusted life year Hedonic damages Intrinsic value ethics Psychological significance and value in life Rational choice theory Utilitarianism Value personal and cultural References edit a b Best Practice Regulation Guidance Note Value of statistical life PDF Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Australian Government October 2023 a b c Miller Ted R 2000 Variations between Countries in Values of Statistical Life Journal of Transport Economics and Policy 34 169 188 ISSN 0022 5258 a b Franks Andrew Whitehead Richard Crossthwaite Phil Small Louise 2002 Application of QRA in Operational Safety Issues Research Report 025 Sudbury HSE Books ISBN 0 7176 2570 2 a b Rausand Marvin 2011 Risk Assessment Theory Methods and Applications Hoboken N J John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 63764 7 a b FEMA Benefit Cost Analysis BCA Toolkit 6 0 Release Notes PDF 2020 07 31 Retrieved 2021 10 29 a b Mortality Risk Valuation EPA 2014 04 21 Retrieved 2017 04 25 a b c d e Gruber Jonathan Public Finance and Public Policy 5 ed Worth Publisher pp 226 233 Mankiw Gregory 2012 Principles of Economics Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 538 45305 9 Rohlfs Chris 2015 New Estimates of the Value of a Statistical Life Using Air Bag Regulations as a Quasi experiment American Economic Journal Economic Policy 7 1 331 59 doi 10 1257 pol 20110309 hdl 10419 67207 Keeler Emmett 2001 The value of remaining lifetime is close to estimated values of life Journal of Health Economics 20 1 141 143 doi 10 1016 S0167 6296 00 00070 9 PMID 11148869 Murphy JJ 2005 A meta analysis of hypothetical bias in stated preference valuation Environmental and Resource Economics 152 Diamond Peter 1994 Contingent Valuation Is Some Number Better than No Number Journal of Economic Perspectives 8 4 45 64 doi 10 1257 jep 8 4 45 Linden Mathias Kortzfleisch Harald von Arndt Manfred 2015 1C23 Railway accident costs determining the value of preventing a casualty by analyzing national investigation bodies reports Safety Infrastructure The Proceedings of International Symposium on Seed up and Service Technology for Railway and Maglev Systems STECH 2015 1C23 1 1C23 8 doi 10 1299 jsmestech 2015 1C23 1 a b IMPLEMENTATION GUIDANCE FOR CSIs ANNEX I OF DIRECTIVE EU 2016 798 PDF 2016 Retrieved 7 April 2024 ECE TRANS WP 1 GE 1 12 PDF Retrieved 7 April 2024 Milne Jonathan 2006 10 22 The Hidden Price Put on Your Life The Times Archived from the original on 2022 08 20 Retrieved 2023 07 17 Viscussi W Kip 2005 The Value of Life PDF Harvard John M Olin Discussion Paper Series 517 European Value of a Quality Adjusted Life Year Newcastle University U S Environmental Protection Agency October 1997 The Benefits and Costs of the Clean Air Act 1970 to 1990 Retrospective Study Environmental Economics Research Inventory I 3 U S Environmental Protection Agency October 1997 The Benefits and Costs of the Clean Air Act 1970 to 1990 Retrospective Study Environmental Economics Research Inventory 44 Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries CFOI Current and Revised Data Bureau of Labor Statistics United States Department of Labor Viscusi W Kip 1995 Fatal Tradeoffs New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195102932 U S Environmental Protection Agency October 1997 The Benefits and Costs of the Clean Air Act 1970 to 1990 Retrospective Study Environmental Economics Research Inventory 8 Rice Dorothy 1967 The Economic Value of Human Life American Journal of Public Health 57 11 1954 1966 doi 10 2105 AJPH 57 11 1954 PMC 1227852 PMID 6069745 Hall Robert 2007 The Value of Life and the Rise of Health Spending PDF Quarterly Journal of Economics 122 39 72 doi 10 1162 qjec 122 1 39 S2CID 1542501 Zenios Stefanos 2009 An Empiric Estimate of the Value of Life Updating the Renal Dialysis Cost Effectiveness Standard Value in Health 12 1 80 87 doi 10 1111 j 1524 4733 2008 00401 x PMID 19911442 Kingsbury Kathleen 2008 05 20 The Value of a Human Life 129 000 TIME Retrieved 10 March 2019 OSHA OSHA Department of Labor Retrieved 10 March 2019 Kennedy Christopher 1985 Criminal Sentences for Corporations Alternative Fining Mechanisms California Law Review 73 2 doi 10 15779 Z385X6G Hultkrantz Lars 20 September 2012 The value of a statistical life in Sweden A review of the empirical literature Health Policy 108 2 3 302 310 doi 10 1016 j healthpol 2012 09 007 PMID 23084655 Majumder Agamoni Madheswaran S 2018 Value of Statistical Life in India A Hedonic Wage Approach PDF Institute for Social and Economic Change ISBN 978 81 7791 263 0 a b Social cost of road crashes and injuries 2016 update PDF NZTA March 2017 Guide to Social Cost Benefit Analysis The Treasury 27 July 2015 Social cost of road crashes and injuries 2019 update Hoon Shi Lim Khee Meng 2008 The value of statistical life in Singapore Deriving Accident Costs using Willingness to Pay Approaches A Case Study for Singapore Retrieved 2024 01 15 Egerstrom N Rojas Rueda D Martuzzi M Jalaludin B Nieuwenhuijsen M So R Lim Y H Loft S Andersen Z J Cole Hunter T 2022 Health and economic benefits of meeting WHO air quality guidelines Western Pacific Region Bulletin of the World Health Organization 101 2 130 139 doi 10 2471 BLT 22 288938 PMC 9874370 PMID 36733628 Ara Shihomi Tekesin Cem 4 July 2014 Measuring the Value of Mortality Risk Reductions in Turkey International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 11 7 6890 6922 doi 10 3390 ijerph110706890 PMC 4113852 PMID 25000150 Tekesin Cem Ara Shihomi 29 September 2017 The Monetary Valuation of Lifetime Health Improvement and Life Expectancy Gains in Turkey International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 14 10 1151 doi 10 3390 ijerph14101151 PMC 5664652 PMID 28961227 Tuna E Yenilmez F B Kockaya G 2016 11 01 Estimation Of Value Of Life With A Model Approach Depending On Net Present Value For Turkey Value in Health 19 7 A477 doi 10 1016 j jval 2016 09 756 ISSN 1098 3015 Stoimost chelovecheskoj zhizni v Rossii v 2015 godu sostavila 4 5 mln rublej PDF Center for Strategic Researches RGS UK Transport Safety Who is responsible PDF March 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2024 Hirth Richard A 2000 Willingness to pay for a quality adjusted life year in search of a standard Medical Decision Making 20 3 332 342 doi 10 1177 0272989X0002000310 PMID 10929856 S2CID 25646395 a b Kingsbury Kathleen 20 May 2008 The Value of a Human Life 129 000 time com Archived from the original on May 27 2008 Lee Chris P 2009 An Empiric Estimate of the Value of Life Updating the Renal Dialysis Cost Effectiveness Standard Value in Health 12 1 80 87 doi 10 1111 j 1524 4733 2008 00401 x PMID 19911442 Appelbaum Binyamin Feb 16 2011 As U S Agencies Put More Value on a Life Businesses Fret The New York Times Guidance on Treatment of the Economic Value of a Statistical Life PDF US Department of Transportation 13 June 2014 DoT 2016 PDF 2016 08 08 Retrieved 2017 04 23 Departmental Guidance on Valuation of a Statistical Life in Economic Analysis U S Department of Transportation 23 March 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2023 a b c Viscusi W Kip Aldy Joseph E 2003 The Value of a Statistical Life A Critical Review of Market Estimates Throughout the World Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 27 1 5 76 doi 10 1023 A 1025598106257 S2CID 189928888 Mayyasi Alex 30 June 2016 How Children Went from Worthless to Priceless Priceonomics Retrieved 8 July 2016 a b Sunstein Cass 2004 11 01 Valuing Life A Plea for Disaggregation Duke Law Journal 54 2 385 445 ISSN 0012 7086 PMID 15940845 a b c d e Cameron Trudy Ann 2010 07 01 Euthanizing the Value of a Statistical Life Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 4 2 161 178 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 722 7945 doi 10 1093 reep req010 ISSN 1750 6816 a b c Carneades 2022 Are All Lives Equal Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix it Carneades org ISBN 979 8986128610 a b c Anderson Elizabeth 1993 Value in ethics and economics Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 93189 0 OCLC 27430064 John Stephen David Curran Emma J 2021 03 19 Costa cancer and coronavirus contractualism as a guide to the ethics of lockdown Journal of Medical Ethics 48 9 643 650 doi 10 1136 medethics 2020 107103 ISSN 0306 6800 PMC 7985975 PMID 33741680 Sunstein Cass 2004 11 01 Valuing Life A Plea for Disaggregation Duke Law Journal 54 2 385 445 ISSN 0012 7086 PMID 15940845 First VSL should vary across risks For example people are willing to pay high amounts to avoid cancer risks and hence there is reason to think that people s VSL is higher for cancer deaths than for sudden unanticipated deaths Cancer risks are involved in the work of many regulatory agencies and people seem to be particularly concerned about such risks in a way that should produce a high VSL almost unquestionably higher than the values that agencies now use More generally deaths that produce unusual fear or that are accompanied by high levels of pain and suffering should be expected to produce a higher VSL Human beings face countless mortality risks and it would be truly bizarre to maintain that people value avoiding each of those risks identically Second VSL should vary across individuals simply because different people are willing to pay different amounts to avoid risks People who are risk averse will be willing to pay more and will therefore show a higher VSL than people who are risk seeking Those who are rich will show a higher VSL than those who are poor People who are thirty might well show a higher VSL than people who are sixty It follows that different demographic groups will show diversity in their VSLs as well Carneades 2022 Are All Lives Equal Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix it Carneades org ISBN 979 8986128610 we should value risks by demographic groups so that if a particular group is more impacted by a risk than another we can use a more accurate value of a statistical life for that group This will assure that the government neither imposes undue costs or fails to eliminate risks that individuals would be willing to pay to eliminate Ackerman Frank 2004 Priceless on knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing Lisa Heinzerling ISBN 1 56584 850 0 OCLC 52819812 Sagoff Mark 2004 Price principle and the environment Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 511 23172 5 OCLC 76951369 Carneades 25 June 2022 Are All Lives Equal Why Cost Benefit Analysis Values Rich Lives More and How Philosophy Can Fix it Carneades org ISBN 979 8986128610 If there are some goods that cannot be compared then the project of attempting to monetize all of the benefits and costs for comparison is flawed from the start If you accept this position you may have a way out of the original problematic conclusion If we cannot compare the value of a life and other benefits then the problem of disparately valued lives comes from trying to convert a life into something with which it cannot be compared money Further reading editMurphy Kevin M Topel Robert H 2006 The Value of Health and Longevity PDF Journal of Political Economy 114 5 871 904 doi 10 1086 508033 S2CID 19755649 Schelling Thomas C 1987 Value of Life The New Palgrave A Dictionary of Economics Vol 4 pp 793 96 Viscusi W Kip 2003 The Value of Life Estimates with Risks by Occupation and Industry PDF Discussion Paper No 422 Cambridge Mass Harvard Law School ISSN 1045 6333 Retrieved 17 July 2023 External links edit Motor Vehicle Accident Costs US Department of Transportation 31 October 1994 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Value of life amp oldid 1218282437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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