Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and Pricing

This study explores relationships between upper secondary school students’ understanding of prices and environmental impacts. The study uses responses from 110 students to problems in which they were asked to explain differences in prices and also to express and justify opinions on what should be th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cecilia Lundholm, Caroline Ignell, Peter Davies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/3/982
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spelling doaj-4e953bcbcb734113bdb8c28645f603842020-11-25T00:53:11ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502013-03-015398299610.3390/su5030982Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and PricingCecilia LundholmCaroline IgnellPeter DaviesThis study explores relationships between upper secondary school students’ understanding of prices and environmental impacts. The study uses responses from 110 students to problems in which they were asked to explain differences in prices and also to express and justify opinions on what should be the difference in prices. Very few students expressed an environmental dimension in their understanding of price. A few students suggested that environmental impact influenced price by raising demand for “Environmentally friendly products”. A few students suggested that ‘environmentally friendly products’ had higher prices because they were more costly to produce. We found no examples of students combining both lines of explanation. However, nearly half of the students believed that prices should reflect environmental effects, and this reasoning was divided between cases where the point was justified by a broad environmental motivation and cases where the point was justified in relation to incentives–to get consumers to act in a more environmentally friendly way.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/3/982externalitiesconceptions of priceconceptions of human and physical environment interactions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cecilia Lundholm
Caroline Ignell
Peter Davies
spellingShingle Cecilia Lundholm
Caroline Ignell
Peter Davies
Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and Pricing
Sustainability
externalities
conceptions of price
conceptions of human and physical environment interactions
author_facet Cecilia Lundholm
Caroline Ignell
Peter Davies
author_sort Cecilia Lundholm
title Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and Pricing
title_short Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and Pricing
title_full Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and Pricing
title_fullStr Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and Pricing
title_full_unstemmed Swedish Upper Secondary School Students’ Conceptions of Negative Environmental Impact and Pricing
title_sort swedish upper secondary school students’ conceptions of negative environmental impact and pricing
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2013-03-01
description This study explores relationships between upper secondary school students’ understanding of prices and environmental impacts. The study uses responses from 110 students to problems in which they were asked to explain differences in prices and also to express and justify opinions on what should be the difference in prices. Very few students expressed an environmental dimension in their understanding of price. A few students suggested that environmental impact influenced price by raising demand for “Environmentally friendly products”. A few students suggested that ‘environmentally friendly products’ had higher prices because they were more costly to produce. We found no examples of students combining both lines of explanation. However, nearly half of the students believed that prices should reflect environmental effects, and this reasoning was divided between cases where the point was justified by a broad environmental motivation and cases where the point was justified in relation to incentives–to get consumers to act in a more environmentally friendly way.
topic externalities
conceptions of price
conceptions of human and physical environment interactions
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/3/982
work_keys_str_mv AT cecilialundholm swedishuppersecondaryschoolstudentsconceptionsofnegativeenvironmentalimpactandpricing
AT carolineignell swedishuppersecondaryschoolstudentsconceptionsofnegativeenvironmentalimpactandpricing
AT peterdavies swedishuppersecondaryschoolstudentsconceptionsofnegativeenvironmentalimpactandpricing
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