Author/Authors
Caplan، نويسنده , , Arthur J. and Sims، نويسنده , , Charles and Anderson، نويسنده , , Elliot Jordan، نويسنده ,
DocumentNumber
3543499
Title Of Article
Measuring the environmental cost of hypocrisy
شماره ركورد
2582
Latin Abstract
This paper provides an example of how to estimate the marginal environmental cost of hypocrisy using revealed-behavior and self-identification survey responses from coffee drinkers regarding their use of cardboard and plastic (i.e., non-reusable) cups. Coffee shops provide a convenient microcosm for assessing the impact of hypocritical behavior because of (1) readily available, cheap substitutes (i.e., reusable coffee cups), (2) a relatively accurate estimate of the environmental (in particular, carbon) cost associated with using non-reusable cups, and (3) the ability to delineate hypocritical behavior by observing a choice with relatively few potential confounding factors. Hypocritical behavior is measured as a geometric mean of how often an individual takes coffee in a non-reusable cup and the degree to which the individual self-identifies as being concerned about his environmental footprint. All else equal, the more often a person takes his coffee in a non-reusable cup and the greater the degree to which he self-identifies as being concerned about his footprint, the greater the individualʹs “hypocrisy score.” Controlling for other attitudinal and demographic characteristics (including self-identified awareness of environmental issues and willingness to pay for the convenience of using a non-reusable cup), we are able to determine the marginal effect of an individualʹs hypocrisy score on the environmental cost associated with the use of non-reusable coffee cups.
From Page
124
NaturalLanguageKeyword
Hypocritical bias , Hypocrisy score , Environmental cost
JournalTitle
Studia Iranica
To Page
135
To Page
135
Link To Document