How a Fee per Unit Garbage Affects Aggregate Recycling in a Model with Heterogeneous Households

Working Paper: NBER ID: w4905

Authors: Thomas C. Kinnaman; Don Fullerton

Abstract: This paper develops a utility maximizing model of household choice among garbage disposal, recycling, and littering. The impact of a user fee for garbage collection is modelled for heterogeneous households with different preferences for recycling. The model explains (1) why some households participate in curbside recycling programs even in the absence of a user fee, (2) why other households do not participate, even in the presence of a user fee, and (3) why some households choose to litter when others do not. Household choices are aggregated to determine the effect of a user fee on the community-wide quantities of garbage, recycling, and litter. We show how an increase in the user fee can decrease aggregate recycling.

Keywords: garbage collection; user fees; recycling; littering; household behavior

JEL Codes: H23; Q53; Q58


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
user fees (H29)aggregate recycling (L99)
user fees (H29)aggregate litter (E10)
user fees (H29)total garbage (L99)
household preferences (D12)response to user fees (H29)
intrinsic motivations (O31)recycling participation (L99)
social norms (Z13)recycling participation (L99)

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