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Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education
University of California, San Francisco

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Valuing Human Life: Estimating the Present Value of Lifetime Earnings, 2000
Wendy Max Ph.D., University of California, San Francisco
Dorothy P. Rice, University of California San Francisco
Hai-Yen Sung, University of California, San Francisco
Martha Michel, University of California San Francisco

Download the Paper (166 K, PDF file) - October 1, 2004 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:

Abstract

Objectives. This paper describes the methodology for estimating the present value of lifetime earnings (PVLE) for the year 2000.

Methods. Estimation takes into account life expectancy by gender and age group, percent of people in the labor force or keeping house, current pattern of earnings at successive ages, an imputed value for household production, and the discount rate.

Results. At a discount rate of 3 percent, males and females aged 20-24 have the highest PVLE — $1,517,045 and $1,085,188 respectively. Lifetime earnings for men are higher than for women. Higher discount rates yield lower values at all ages.

Conclusions. The present value of lifetime earnings yields useful estimates of the valueof life. These estimates are conservative compared with other approaches.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Wendy Max Ph.D., Dorothy P. Rice, Hai-Yen Sung, and Martha Michel, "Valuing Human Life: Estimating the Present Value of Lifetime Earnings, 2000" (October 1, 2004). Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education. Economic Studies and Related Methods. Paper PVLE2000.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ctcre/esarm/PVLE2000

 
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