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Is unemployment good for the environment?
Institution:1. University of Wisconsin-Stout, United States;2. University of Kansas, United States;1. School Of Economics, Geary Institute for Public Policy, University College Dublin Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland;2. School Of Economics, Geary Institute for Public Policy, University College Dublin Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland;3. School of Public Health, Physiotherapy and Sports Science, Woodview House, University College Dublin Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland;1. Institute of Sociology, Goethe University Frankfurt, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 6, 60323 Frankfurt am Main, Germany;2. Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany, and University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA;1. Dutch Institute for Social Science Research (SCP), The Hague, The Netherlands;2. Graduate School of Education, Stanford University, USA;3. Department of Sociology, University of South Carolina, USA;4. Department of Human Geography, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Abstract:Environmental quality is a public good, potentially impacted by everybody. Individual level pro-environmental behavior affects environmental quality in the aggregate. Therefore, it is important to understand what causes individual’s pro-environmental behaviors to change. We quantify the causal effect of one determinant, unemployment, using an EU-27 population representative Eurobarometer survey. Drawing on results from the theory of the private provision of public goods, and recognizing that unemployment decreases income and the opportunity cost of time, we formulate testable predictions that unemployment will decrease the extent of pro-environmental behaviors that require monetary contributions and increase the extent of pro-environmental behaviors that mainly require time/effort. Instrumental variables regressions provide empirical evidence to support these hypotheses. Changes in the unemployment rate within a sub-national region provide the exogenous variation needed to identify the causal effect. Several supplemental questions on the survey provide evidence that environmental issues lose saliency and economic issues gain saliency when one becomes unemployed, suggesting that interested parties may wish to emphasize cost savings of pro-environmental behavior rather than environmental benefits during times of increased unemployment.
Keywords:Instrumental variables  Pro-environmental behavior  Eurobarometer survey  Unemployment
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