Conference Agenda

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Session Overview
Session
Green preferences and pro-environmental behavior
Time:
Thursday, 19/June/2025:
11:00am - 12:45pm

Session Chair: Mireille Chiroleu-Assouline, University Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
Location: Auditorium F


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Presentations

Nudging, fast and slow: Experimental evidence from food choices under time pressure

Paul Lohmann1, Elisabeth Gsottbauer2, Christina Gravert3, Lucia Reisch1

1University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 2London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), United Kingdom; 3University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Discussant: Eduard Alonso-Pauli (Universitat de les Illes Balears)

Understanding when and why nudges work is crucial for designing interventions that consistently and reliably change behaviour. This paper explores the relationship between decision-making speed and the effectiveness of two nudges – carbon footprint labelling and menu repositioning – aimed at encouraging climate-friendly food choices. Using an incentivized online randomized controlled trial with a quasi-representative sample of British consumers (N=3,052) ordering meals through an experimental food-delivery platform, we introduced a time-pressure mechanism to capture both fast and slow decision-making processes. Our findings suggest that menu repositioning is an effective tool for promoting climate-friendly choices when decisions are made quickly, though the effect fades when subjects have time to revise their choices. Carbon labels, in contrast, showed minimal impact overall but reduced emissions among highly educated and climate-conscious individuals when they made fast decisions. The results imply that choice architects should apply both interventions in contexts where consumers make fast decisions, such as digital platforms, canteens, or fast-food restaurants to help mitigate climate externalities. More broadly, our findings suggest that the available decision time in different contexts might at least partly explain differences in effect sizes found in previous studies of these nudges.



Incentives, Pro-Environmental Behavior and Intrinsic Motivation: Field Evidence From Waste Sorting and Cheating

Eduard Alonso-Pauli1, Pau Balart1, Lara Ezquerra1, Iñigo Hernandez-Arenaz2

1Universitat de les Illes Balears, Spain; 2Universidad Pública de Navarra, Spain

Discussant: Sara Constantino (Northeastern University)

We run a randomized field experiment to evaluate the impact of small incentives on waste sorting. For implementing incentives, we exploit a card-scanning technology that tracks bio-waste sorting in real-time. We provide a theoretical model to interpret the finding of our experiment in a context of a prosocial activity where cheating can arise. The model shows that the removal of incentives, provides an excellent opportunity for quantifying the price effect, identifying cheating and exploring changes in intrinsic motivation.

Our results show that incentives increase recycling. However, the effect declines over time while incentives are in place and no difference in the trend is observed when removing the incentive. These findings are compatible with crowding-in of intrinsic motivation and incompatible with cheating.



Intergenerational Transmission of Pro-Environmental Attitudes and Behaviors

Shubhro Bhattacharya2, Sara Constantino1, Nirajana Mishra3, Nishith Prakash3, Dighbijoy Samaddar5, Raisa Sherif4

1Stanford University, United States of America; 2University of California San Diego; 3Northeastern University; 4Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance; 5Centre for Social and Behaviour Change

Discussant: Mireille Chiroleu-Assouline (University Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne)

This study examines how environmental education influences household behavior through intra-family transmission of environmental awareness and actions. Using a randomized field experiment with 1,545 child-parent pairs in Patna, India, we analyze both direct program effects on participants and indirect spillover effects on non participating family members. Our experimental design creates four distinct groups: a control group, child-only participants, parent-only participants, and joint child-parent participants. This allows us to systematically evaluate the effectiveness of targeting different household members with environmental education. Our findings reveal nuanced patterns of influence within families. We observe spillover effects on non- participating family members, but these effects vary by both the type of behavior and the direction of influence. While both parents and children can influence each other’s observable pro-environmental behaviors, we find that children uniquely shape their parents’ attitudes toward climate change and perceptions of environmental risks. Interestingly, joint participation by both parent and child does not yield stronger results than targeting either member individually, suggesting that selective targeting may be more cost-effective for environmental education programs



Informing the uninformed, sensitizing the informed: The two sides of consumer environmental awareness

Dorothée Brécard1, Mireille Chiroleu-Assouline2

1Université de Toulon, LEAD, Toulon, France; 2Paris School of Economics, University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and Institut universitaire de France, Paris, France

Discussant: Paul Lohmann (University of Cambridge)

How do environmental information and awareness interact to improve environmental quality by changing consumer behavior and firm strategies? This article provides theoretical insights using an original differentiation model within a general framework whose specific cases have been studied previously. On the demand side, only informed consumers differentiate brown from green product quality, while uninformed consumers consider these perfect substitutes. Moreover, all informed consumers value the green product and devalue the brown product as a result of an aversion effect but are heterogeneous in their environmental awareness. On the supply side, two firms offer different environmental qualities and compete on price. We consider two types of environmental campaigns: one that increases the number of informed consumers and one that increases the environmental awareness of informed consumers. We show that these campaigns crucially determine three market configurations: segmented; fragmented, with a brown product that appeals to both uninformed consumers and a fraction of informed consumers; and covered. Assuming that the greenest consumer behavior is abstention, we find that both campaigns do not always lead to better environmental quality; that is, a situation in which all consumers are informed and some highly environmentally aware is not necessarily the greenest situation. Depending on the aversion effect, the budget of the campaign organizer, and their relative cost-effectiveness, information and awareness-raising campaigns must be carefully combined to achieve the best possible environmental quality.



 
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