Do not incentivize eco-friendly behavior– Go for a competition to go green!

Which behavior-based interventions are more appropriate to induce energy saving: energy saving goals with or without incentive, energy saving products, environmentally related information, social comparison or competition? We try to answer this question in a comprehensive study. First, we designed e...

全面介绍

Gespeichert in:
书目详细资料
发表在:MAGKS - Joint Discussion Paper Series in Economics (Band 34-2015)
Autoren: Bühren, Christoph, Daskalakis, Maria
格式: 文件
语言:英语
出版: Philipps-Universität Marburg 2015
主题:
在线阅读:PDF-Volltext
标签: 添加标签
没有标签, 成为第一个标记此记录!
实物特征
总结:Which behavior-based interventions are more appropriate to induce energy saving: energy saving goals with or without incentive, energy saving products, environmentally related information, social comparison or competition? We try to answer this question in a comprehensive study. First, we designed energy bills with different behavioral interventions. Second, we evaluated their appropriateness in an empirical survey with 457 participants. Third, we tested behavioral consequences in real effort lab experiments with 550 subjects in 11 treatments and one baseline. Our results indicate that monetary incentives to save energy might foster the intention to invest effort in energy saving but backfire if factual performance is required. Instead, fostering non-incentivized self-set goals and providing social comparison induced substantial effort to protect the environment. Non-incentivized competition to save energy provided the best results. Our study concludes with implications for practical policy design and further need of research.
实物描述:35 Seiten
ISSN:1867-3678
DOI:10.17192/es2024.0393