Do Social Norms Matter to Energy-Saving Behavior? Endogenous Social and Correlated Effects
Author(s) -
Toshi H. Arimura,
Hajime Katayama,
Mari Sakudo
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of the association of environmental and resource economists
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.367
H-Index - 22
eISSN - 2333-5963
pISSN - 2333-5955
DOI - 10.1086/686068
Subject(s) - simultaneity , causation , psychology , social psychology , sample (material) , survey data collection , identification (biology) , energy (signal processing) , econometrics , economics , statistics , political science , ecology , chemistry , physics , mathematics , classical mechanics , chromatography , law , biology
A growing number of survey-based studies have examined individual environmental behavior and support the idea that social norms are an important determinant of the behavior. We depart from the literature by estimating a structural model of the social interactions in an individual’s decision to engage in energy-saving practices and account for the methodological issues that are inherent in survey data: simultaneity, common shocks, and nonrandom group selection. Using data from a Japanese household survey, we find that the influence of social norms on individuals’ energy-saving practices is small or insignificant and that unobserved individual characteristics are correlated between members in a group. Although based on a specific sample and a particular identification strategy, our results illustrate that reduced-form evidence, of positive correlation among group members, which is abundant in the literature, should be interpreted with caution because it may not reflect causation.
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