1. Introduction
Buddhism, a word meaning the doctrine explained by Buddha and the way to become a Buddha, is one of the major religions of the world [
1,
2]. Buddhism was first introduced to Korea at the end of the 4th century, in 372, which is about 800 years after the death of the historical Buddha. At that time, shamanism was the indigenous religion in what was then Korea. Buddhism became mixed with shamanism in harmony with the rites of nature worship. Thus, Korean Buddhism came to have its own features and its roots went deep into the Korean soil. Currently, about a quarter of the population of Korea are Buddhists.
Jogyesa Buddhist Temple (JBT) was established in 1395, at the start of the Chosun Dynasty. JBT was originally built in 1910 by monks longing for the independence of Korean Buddhism and the recovery of Koreans’ self-esteem, and it bore the name of Gakhwangsa Buddhist Temple. In 1937, it was moved to its current location where it was reconstructed. The construction was completed in 1938. At this time, the temple was known as Taegosa. This was during the Japanese occupation of Korea (1910–1945). After liberation, in 1954, the Buddhist Purification Movement was established. The goal of the movement was to eliminate any Japanese influence remaining from the Japanese occupation. In 1954, the temple was renamed Jogyesa. This was a way for Korea to move on and forget the past horrors of the Japanese occupation [
3].
Since 1936, JBT has been the head temple of the first district of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism. JBT is the most important, popular, and representative Buddhist temple in Korea. JBT was the first propagation center to argue for the legitimacy of local Buddhism and the first temple located inside the boundary of the four gates of the city of Seoul, the capital of Korea. The Daeungjeon (Main Dharma Hall) of JBT is the largest temple building in the city of Seoul and it, alone, is a spectacular and colorful sight for any visitor. Visitors are surprised to find a beautiful setting and sense of calmness in the middle of the hectic and crowded city. The grounds are a great escape from the big city for both locals and tourists. Some natural elements that should not be missed include a rare 500 year old Baeksong lacebark pine tree and a 450 year old Chinese scholar tree. JBT may not have the most beautiful or grand grounds in Korea, but its strength lies in its convenient location, which makes it one of the most visited and popular temples in central Seoul [
3].
JBT promotes the embodiment of a society where people live together, and Bodhisattva’s spirit. Moreover, JBT is a historic site that has survived the turbulent modern history of Korea. JBT is located within the heart of Seoul, where the public can enjoy rest and leisure. JBT has positioned itself well as the chief temple of the Order through the remodeling of the Main Hall and the construction of the One Pillar Gate. It is also a leader in devotional practices and religious and public welfare activities. The Main Hall is open 24 h a day to all members of the public, allowing both local people and foreigners to visit. JBT promotes itself as an open space, inviting everyone to the temple’s events and ceremonies [
4].
However, JBT has a painful recent past. A military coup took place against the ruling civilian government, and a military dictatorship came into power in Korea in 1980. In order to strengthen the dictatorship, the dictator arrested 153 monks affiliated with the Jogye Order by force on 27 October 1980, and used violence and torture against them. We call this incident the “10.27 event”. The people worked hard for democracy and initiated a civilian government in 1987. The Korean government investigated the 10.27 event, officially announced that it was a clear abuse of state power, and promised to rehabilitate the victims’ reputations and pay compensation for the damage caused [
5].
The Seoul city government is planning to build a museum for teaching history, particularly the history of the 10.27 event, in the precincts of JBT. There are also plans to build a new shopping arcade for Buddhist culture and tourism, to construct an experience center for Korean traditional culture, and to make an open space for domestic and/or foreign visitors. The Seoul city government’s purpose is to transform JBT into a cultural tourism resource and historical site. The government should make an informed decision on whether or not to implement the transformation. If the transformation goes ahead, the people of Seoul will absorb the costs through local taxes. Current and future generations will enjoy the benefits of the transformation [
6].
The JBT is a famous and representative cultural and historical site located on Seoul, the capital of Korea, but it suffers from far too run-down facilities for convenience and insufficient open space for visitors. For the sake of JBT’s sustainability, remodeling, or transforming JBT into a cultural tourism resource is widely demanded by the Seoul residents, domestic and foreign visitors, and policy-makers of the Seoul government. However, considerable public expenditures are required to do so. Thus, public support for the transformation is inevitably needed to justify the expenditures. This study tries to analyze the degree of the public support to provide responsible quantitative information on the public WTP for the transformation with policy-makers. We think that this is an interesting feature of our study.
When economic efficiency is employed as the sole criterion, one should perform a conventional cost-benefit analysis and determine whether or not to implement the transformation [
7]. The costs of implementing the transformation can be easily measured against the benefits. On the other hand, assessing the economic benefits arising from this transformation is quite complicated. The economic benefits are the sum of its public and private values. Therefore, this paper attempts to assess the public value of the transformation by investigating the willingness to pay (WTP) for the transformation so as to obtain quantitative information that can be provided to policy-makers.
To this end, we use the contingent valuation (CV) technique. As will be discussed in the next section, this has been most widely employed in the context of empirical works measuring the economic value of a cultural or historical good [
8,
9,
10]. The CV method usually asks randomly-selected respondents questions about whether they are willing to pay a specified amount for obtaining a good, with a survey of randomly selected households [
11,
12,
13,
14]. A large number of respondents in our CV survey revealed that they were unwilling to pay for the transformation, as will be explained below. In other words, we obtained WTP data with observations of zero. To reflect these data in the analysis, we utilized a spike model that can explicitly incorporate the possibility of zero WTP responses as well as positive WTP responses.
Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to measure the public value of transforming JBT in Seoul, Korea into a cultural tourism resource through analyzing the WTP for the transformation, using the CV method. The remainder of the paper is structured as follows: some methodological issues are explained in
Section 2; the WTP model and the data used here are described in
Section 3; the estimation results are presented in
Section 4; and the final section concludes the paper.
2. Methodological Issues
2.1. Method of Deriving the WTP for Transforming JBT into a Cultural Tourism Resource
As addressed above, the economic benefits of a project are the sum of the public and private values of a project [
15]. The private value is usually estimated with ease, but the public value is hard to measure. The public value can be assessed using a stated preference technique, such as the CV method. The CV technique has been widely applied in the literature for obtaining the WTP for a non-market good. There are no restrictions on the object to be valued when using the CV method. In particular, it is especially useful because it can capture the non-use or existence value of a good that cannot be measured through a market mechanism. Non-market goods include cultural goods or public goods, like the transformation. Thus, as explained earlier, this study seeks to utilize the CV approach to assess the WTP for implementing the transformation.
The CV method asks randomly chosen consumers a question concerning their WTP for the particular good, using a well-structured survey [
16,
17,
18,
19,
20]. Some people may doubt the practicality and usefulness of the CV technique because it gathers information from a survey of respondents. In this regard, the blue-ribbon National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Panel came to the influential conclusion that the CV method can produce reliable quantitative information that can be utilized in decision-making with respect to both public administration and jurisdiction, provided that the guidelines proposed by the NOAA Panel are observed [
21]. Moreover, following the guidelines can ensure the validity and accuracy of the CV method.
For example, the goods of concern should be familiar to the public, like the JBT which is familiar with citizen because it is representative of the Korea Buddhist temple and located in the center of Seoul, the CV survey should be administered through face-to-face interviews by professionally-trained interviewers rather than by telephone or mail interviews, a suitable payment vehicle should be adopted and presented to the respondents, and the substitutes to the goods should be explained to the respondents in the survey. These conditions were met in our study, as will be discussed in detail below.
2.2. The Goods to Be Valued
Located around the temple grounds are a variety of stores and shops that specialize in Buddhist items that can be great souvenirs. However, the buildings where the stores and shops are located and the environment surrounding JBT are now rather old-fashioned and somewhat run-down. Thus, it is necessary for a new shopping arcade for Buddhist culture and tourism to be built. The items for sale would include small Buddha statues, prayer beads, small wooden gongs, monks’ clothing, and incense. Moreover, as explained above, constructing a museum to teach history (the 10.27 event) and an experience center for Korean traditional culture in the precincts of JBT, and making an open space for domestic and/or foreign visitors, are being considered. The Seoul government should decide whether to invest public money into the transformation, including these activities. We attempt to derive the WTP for the transformation.
2.3. Survey Design Issues
We commissioned a professional survey firm to arrange the CV field survey. The firm drew a random sample of 500 households from the Seoul population to obtain information on the households’ WTP for the transformation and also information about their socioeconomic characteristics. The study area of this research was restricted to Seoul, the capital of Korea, where the population equals a quarter of the total national population. Seoul is a large city, with a population of around ten million people (3.5 million households). In order to draw a random sample of this population, sampling was conducted by a professional polling firm (Research Prime Service, Inc.) located on Seoul. Seoul comprises 25 wards (called gu). Our sample of 500 households was allocated to the wards or gu in proportion to each gu’s population characteristics, such as age, income, gender, and education level, resulting in 15 to 25 households being assigned to each gu. The population characteristics come from 2010 “National Population and Housing Census” conducted by the Korea National Statistical Office.
A CV survey can be conducted face-to-face or by telephone or mail interviews. Of these, the response rate to a mail survey is usually quite low, and a telephone survey can present only a limited volume of information to the respondents. However in the CV survey, we wanted to convey a large amount of information explaining the transformation to the respondents, to use pictures to describe what the situation would be like with and without the transformation, and to outline the expected effects of the transformation. This is why we used face-to-face interviews.
We gave sufficient information to the interviewers about the purposes and background of the CV survey, and about how to answer questions raised by interviewees during the CV survey. When professional interviewers performed the CV survey, they showed exactly the information on the transformation with explanatory documents and visual materials to the respondents. The interviewers explained to respondents that store owners who are expected to be losers will be provided an arcade space in the basement of JBT and the arcade space will attract a number of visitors. In addition, they explained that JBT, citizens, and visitors are expected to be winners, gaining a resting place and beautiful view.
Thus, these factors should be considered to design CV survey. We described this information on explaining documents to estimate WTP of respondents. The supervisors of the survey company trained the interviewers to implement the CV survey persuasively and effectively in 2013. In order to get reliable and responsible findings from the respondents, heads of households or homemakers aged between 20 and 65 years old were selected and interviewed for the CV survey. Judging from the interviewers’ comments, the respondents stated their WTP responses without great difficulty. The final number of observations to be analyzed in our study was 500. The survey instrument consisted of three parts. The first was the introductory section that explained general background information about the transformation to the respondents and then asked the respondents about their perceptions of the transformation. The scenario that would provide the goods to be valued by the public was, therefore, clearly explained. The second part included questions about WTP for implementing the transformation. The context of the transformation, to ensure that the WTP questions were plausible, understandable, and meaningful, was presented. The final part contained questions related to the household’s socioeconomic variables.
2.4. Method to Elicit WTP
Our study used a close-ended question format. This is preferred in the literature to open-ended questions [
16] because a respondent is likely to show strategic behavior and have difficulty in giving a WTP response when an open-ended question is asked. In addition, the blue-ribbon panel’s report [
21] supported the use of close-ended questions rather than open-ended questions. In the close-ended format, a respondent is asked to state whether he/she would pay a given amount (a “bid”) to obtain a specified improvement in the quantity or quality of the goods to be valued.
This close-ended question format is usually called a single-bounded dichotomous choice (DC) question format since it asks just one question. The double-bounded (DB) DC question format asks a follow-up question to identify the WTP, citing a higher amount when the first response is “yes” and a lower amount when it is “no” [
22]. While the DB question format results in higher statistical efficiency, we do not use this format here because it increases the bias involved in WTP responses and, thus, Bateman et al. [
23] and Carson and Groves [
24] do not favor it.
The findings from focus group interviews of 30 persons allowed us to derive a list of seven bids to be presented to the respondents. The amounts were KRW 1000, 2000, 3000, 5000, 7000, 10,000, and 15,000 (USD 0.90, 1.80, 2.70, 4.40, 6.20, 8.80, and 13.30) per household per year. At the time of the survey, USD 1 was approximately equal to KRW 1131. A bid from the list was randomly offered to each respondent in the CV survey.
2.5. Payment Vehicle
A respondent may be embarrassed to be asked directly for his/her WTP for implementing a project. Thus, it is helpful to introduce into the CV survey questionnaire a medium for paying an amount, to get the respondent to reveal her/his true WTP. We usually call the medium a payment vehicle. Payment vehicles found in the literature include taxes, funds, donations, and expenditure. The respondents should feel at home with the payment vehicle, and the goods to be valued should have a clear connection with it. In this respect, a tax is the most frequently employed payment vehicle for eliciting WTP responses. There are two options: national and local taxes. Of the two, a local tax is related directly to the transformation. Furthermore, among the various types of local taxes, property tax is the one that is the most familiar to respondents. Therefore, property tax is employed in this study as the payment vehicle. WTP admission fees to visit part(s) of the attraction would not necessarily require a majority and would adhere to the “user pays” principle and might come up with different results.
Next, two points should be decided. One is the frequency of payment—whether it should be monthly, quarterly, or annually, or a one-off payment. Following Egan et al.’s [
25] suggestion, we used an annual payment. The other point is the duration of the payment. We decided that this should be five years. In short, each respondent was asked whether she/he was willing to pay a specified amount annually through a higher property tax for the next five years. The WTP question was: “Is your household willing to pay a given amount for implementing the project of transforming JBT into a cultural tourism resource through an increase in the property tax for next five years, if the success of the project is guaranteed?”
Moreover, some additional statements concerning the payment were provided in the survey questionnaire. For example, the respondents were told the following: “If a majority of respondents refuse to pay the cost, the project cannot be implemented. However, if a majority of respondents accept the payment, the projected can be conducted. Please bear in mind that there are many other projects to be implemented by the Seoul government as well as the project”. The reference to property taxes and the need for majority support suggests an “all or nothing situation” in which all will pay for the benefits to a smaller number of users. WTP for admission fees to visit part(s) of the attraction would not necessarily require a majority and would adhere to the “user pays” principle and might come up with different results.
5. Conclusions
JBT is the chief temple of the Jogye Order, which represents Korean Buddhism. Despite this, the buildings where the stores and shops are located, and the environment surrounding JBT, are now old-fashioned and somewhat run-down. Thus, the Seoul government plans to implement a project to transform JBT into a cultural tourism resource and historical site. More specifically, the plans being considered are to build a new shopping arcade for Buddhist culture and tourism, to construct a museum for teaching history (the 10.27 event) and an experience center for Korean traditional culture in the precincts of JBT, and to make an open space for domestic and/or foreign visitors. Since the cost of the transformation will be met by local taxes, public support for the transformation is quite important.
Therefore, the Seoul government asked for quantitative information on the WTP for implementing the transformation. The eventual objective of the transformation is to make JBT a good precedent which is referred by cultural policy-makers. Furthermore, the transformation can serve as a momentum, which means that Korea cultural heritages of religion can be developed as tourism resources in the near future. The demand of sustainable tourism resources has become an important aspect that must be considered by local government [
32]. The transformation has significant meaning as sustainability of the excavation of tourism resources. In this regard, we attempted to report the findings from a CV survey that measures the WTP arising from the implementation of the transformation.
Based on the interviewers’ comments, the value judgments the respondents were required to make were within their abilities. Moreover, all of the parameter estimates from the model have high statistical significance. Thus, the estimated SB DC spike model is statistically meaningful. We found that the mean WTP estimate for the implementation of the transformation is KRW 7129 (USD 6.30) per household per year for the next five years, and that this estimate has high statistical significance. Expanding the value to the city’s whole population gave us KRW 25.4 billion (USD 22.5 million) per year, and the present value of the transformation was computed to be KRW 114.6 billion (USD 101.3 million). We can conclude that Seoul households are ready to shoulder some of the financial burden of implementing the transformation.
Policy implications of whether to implement the transformation or not, could, in principle, be deduced from an examination of costs and benefits associated with the transformation. An important first step in fostering a productive public debate on the transformation is a better understanding of its benefits and costs. The costs of implementing the transformation can be relatively easily computed. On the other hand, measuring the benefits expected from the transformation is quite a difficulty work. The benefits can be compared with the costs of the transformation to determine whether the transformation is economically desirable and whether the decision to implement the transformation should be made. Our study provided information on the public value of the transformation, which can be added to the private value of the transformation to obtain a figure about the economic benefits of the transformation. Moreover, the framework and results of this study can be referred to when other similar programs are being designed in Seoul. We can guess that the public value of these programs are close to the values obtained in this study, although an empirical study valuing the programs should be done to get accurate value information.
As a second step of the study, the following topic should be examined in a future study. In particular, the focus of our study is placed only on the public value or public WTP. However, the transformation is also likely to generate some environmental or congestion costs. This issue has been frequently discussed in the tourism literature. For example, Marsiglio [
33] discussed how the WTP in a tourism context might depend on several factors, including environmental quality and congestion factors). The eventual direct or indirect costs associated with the transformation should be taken into account. Marsiglio [
33] and Farr et al. [
34] dealt with the issue from a theoretical point of view and from an empirical one, respectively. Although our dataset cannot allow us to analyze the issue, it should be noted that these factors is likely to affect and distort the results.