Abstract
Environmental issues provide a rich ground for identifying the existence and consequences of human limitations. In this paper, we present a growing literature lying at the interface between behavioral and environmental economics. This literature identifies alternative solutions to traditional economic instruments in environmental domains that often work imperfectly. But it also faces a set of challenges, including the difficulty of computing welfare effects, and the identification of a robust environmental policy based on context-dependent (socio-) psychological effects. We illustrate our critical discussion with two behavioral schemes that have been widely implemented: “green nudges” and “corporate environmental responsibility.”
Keywords
Behavioral economics Environmental policy Nudge Corporate social responsibility Environmental psychology;
Reference
Rachel Croson, and Nicolas Treich, “Behavioral environmental economics: Promises and challenges”, Environmental and Resource Economics, Springer Netherlands, vol. 58, n. 3, July 2014, pp. 335–351.
See also
Published in
Environmental and Resource Economics, Springer Netherlands, vol. 58, n. 3, July 2014, pp. 335–351