Environmental Externalities and Freeriding in the Household

Working Paper: NBER ID: w24192

Authors: Kelsey Jack; Seema Jayachandran; Sarojini Rao

Abstract: Water use and electricity use, which generate negative environmental externalities, are susceptible to a second externality problem: with household-level billing, each person enjoys private benefits of consumption but shares the cost with other household members. If individual usage is imperfectly observed (as is typical for water and electricity) and family members are imperfectly altruistic toward one another, households overconsume even from their own perspective. We develop this argument and test its prediction that intrahousehold free-riding dampens price sensitivity. We do so in the context of water use in urban Zambia by combining billing records, randomized price variation, and a lab-experimental measure of intrahousehold altruism. We find that more altruistic households are considerably more price sensitive than are less altruistic households. Our results imply that the socially optimal price needs to be set to correct both the environmental externality and also the intrahousehold externality.

Keywords: Environmental Externalities; Freeriding; Household Economics; Water Use; Price Sensitivity

JEL Codes: D10; H21; H23; O10; Q56


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
increased intrahousehold altruism (D64)heightened price sensitivity (D49)
financial incentive treatment (J33)decrease in monthly water use (Q25)
targeting financial incentives at women (J16)greater reductions in water use compared to men (Q25)

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