Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in Germany

Reuse is still seen as a “niche phenomenon” and consumers seem to waste economic opportunities linked to buying and selling second-hand products. For this reason, this paper focuses on incentives and barriers to sell and buy second-hand products, as indicated in the literature, and applies a theoret...

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Main Authors: Henning Wilts, Marina Fecke, Christine Zeher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Economies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/9/2/74
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spelling doaj-2fd03a000830457dbcfc9bc5b5308a772021-05-31T23:45:43ZengMDPI AGEconomies2227-70992021-05-019747410.3390/economies9020074Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in GermanyHenning Wilts0Marina Fecke1Christine Zeher2Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy gGmbH, 42103 Wuppertal, GermanyWuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy gGmbH, 42103 Wuppertal, GermanyWuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy gGmbH, 42103 Wuppertal, GermanyReuse is still seen as a “niche phenomenon” and consumers seem to waste economic opportunities linked to buying and selling second-hand products. For this reason, this paper focuses on incentives and barriers to sell and buy second-hand products, as indicated in the literature, and applies a theoretical framework of transaction costs to explain the existing consumption patterns. For this paper, a representative online survey was conducted in which 1023 consumers in Germany participated, age 16 and older. The data were analyzed for statistically significant deviations between different groups of economic actors selling or buying second-hand products. Results show that valuable unused products exist in households, but barriers such as uncertainties about the reliability of the buyer or the quality of the product hinder the transition into sustainable consumption. Different forms of transaction costs are important explanatory variables to explain why consumers nevertheless predominantly buy new products, although they are aware that second-hand would save money and make an individual contribution to climate protection.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/9/2/74circular economysecond-handreusetransaction costs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Henning Wilts
Marina Fecke
Christine Zeher
spellingShingle Henning Wilts
Marina Fecke
Christine Zeher
Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in Germany
Economies
circular economy
second-hand
reuse
transaction costs
author_facet Henning Wilts
Marina Fecke
Christine Zeher
author_sort Henning Wilts
title Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in Germany
title_short Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in Germany
title_full Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in Germany
title_fullStr Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in Germany
title_full_unstemmed Economics of Waste Prevention: Second-Hand Products in Germany
title_sort economics of waste prevention: second-hand products in germany
publisher MDPI AG
series Economies
issn 2227-7099
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Reuse is still seen as a “niche phenomenon” and consumers seem to waste economic opportunities linked to buying and selling second-hand products. For this reason, this paper focuses on incentives and barriers to sell and buy second-hand products, as indicated in the literature, and applies a theoretical framework of transaction costs to explain the existing consumption patterns. For this paper, a representative online survey was conducted in which 1023 consumers in Germany participated, age 16 and older. The data were analyzed for statistically significant deviations between different groups of economic actors selling or buying second-hand products. Results show that valuable unused products exist in households, but barriers such as uncertainties about the reliability of the buyer or the quality of the product hinder the transition into sustainable consumption. Different forms of transaction costs are important explanatory variables to explain why consumers nevertheless predominantly buy new products, although they are aware that second-hand would save money and make an individual contribution to climate protection.
topic circular economy
second-hand
reuse
transaction costs
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/9/2/74
work_keys_str_mv AT henningwilts economicsofwastepreventionsecondhandproductsingermany
AT marinafecke economicsofwastepreventionsecondhandproductsingermany
AT christinezeher economicsofwastepreventionsecondhandproductsingermany
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