The whole "benefits package" question makes no sense to me.
I'll concede that some of these things - like parental leave, company-provided transport, or company-cooked meals - are quality-of-life benefits that different people might trade off differently against money based upon how much they personally value them. But they're a minority. All of these things, on the other hand, are strictly financial benefits, directly fungible with money:
- Salary and/or bonuses
- Retirement or pension savings matching
- Fitness or wellness benefit
- Conference or education budget
- Childcare benefit
- Stock options or shares
- Health insurance
Thus, the obvious answer - and surely the only remotely rational one - is "I'll value them in proportion to theirthe dollar value that they have to me, given my circumstances." But since the relative size of these things can vary wildly between employers, that means that ordering them basically consists of me guessing at what the dollar value of each benefit is at a typical employer and ordering by that, rather than the ordering in any way reflecting my values. I'm not sure that this process produces any useful data whatsoever.
If you want to elicit information about how much I value particular benefits, you'd be better off removing all the strictly financial benefits and then asking how much salary-or-equivalent I'd be willing to sacrifice for each of a series of fluffier benefits like having the company cook my meals and having a big equipment allowance so I can buy some nice monitors for my desk. But what do you expect to learn from asking me what category I'd prefer the $$$ I get paid to fall under on my payslip?