Negative income shocks and the support of environmental policies - Insights from the COVID-19 pandemic

Category Primary study
JournalFramed Field Experiments
Year 2020
This study explores whether negative income shocks from the COVID-19 pandemic affect the demand for environmental policy. By running a survey in Germany in May 2020, we show that there is a large and negative correlation between the COVID-19 income shocks and the willingness to support green policies. Importantly, this relation is separate from the effect of long-run income. Building on the first evidence, our study provides directions for future valuation studies. Specifically, our results provide a proof of concept that welfare analyses based on willingness-to-pay estimates to assess the benefits of an environmental good or the cost of an environmental damage may be downward biased if temporary changes in income are not considered.
Epistemonikos ID: 0ea4152439957dd0c4b5e06b64410e24f933219a
First added on: Feb 03, 2021