Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?

Paying attention to impacts of behavioral factor on energy efficiency (EE) investments, this study attempts to identify preference characteristics affecting EE investments. We model households’ EE investments with time, risk, and social preferences, conduct a survey, and empirically examine the effe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jihyo Kim, Suhyeon Nam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/8/4152
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spelling doaj-ee07ea425e1541e48805db34c6fc0b8a2021-04-08T23:03:17ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-04-01134152415210.3390/su13084152Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?Jihyo Kim0Suhyeon Nam1Korea Energy Economics Institute, Ulsan 44543, KoreaKorea Energy Economics Institute, Ulsan 44543, KoreaPaying attention to impacts of behavioral factor on energy efficiency (EE) investments, this study attempts to identify preference characteristics affecting EE investments. We model households’ EE investments with time, risk, and social preferences, conduct a survey, and empirically examine the effects of the preference characteristics on home energy retrofit decisions in Korea. We find that the research hypotheses for risk and social preferences that we are derived from the model are supported while those for time preference are partially supported. The results are summarized as follows. First, respondents who discount the future more heavily are less likely to plan a home energy retrofit. Second, very risk-averse respondents are less likely to have experienced a home energy retrofit and very risk-seeking ones are more likely to plan a home energy retrofit. Third, those seriously concerned about environmental issues or who strongly respond to moral norms are likely to have experienced or plan a home energy retrofit.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/8/4152home energy retrofittime preferencerisk preferencesocial preferenceprobit model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jihyo Kim
Suhyeon Nam
spellingShingle Jihyo Kim
Suhyeon Nam
Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?
Sustainability
home energy retrofit
time preference
risk preference
social preference
probit model
author_facet Jihyo Kim
Suhyeon Nam
author_sort Jihyo Kim
title Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?
title_short Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?
title_full Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?
title_fullStr Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?
title_full_unstemmed Do Household Time, Risk, and Social Preferences Affect Home Energy Retrofit Decisions in Korea?
title_sort do household time, risk, and social preferences affect home energy retrofit decisions in korea?
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Paying attention to impacts of behavioral factor on energy efficiency (EE) investments, this study attempts to identify preference characteristics affecting EE investments. We model households’ EE investments with time, risk, and social preferences, conduct a survey, and empirically examine the effects of the preference characteristics on home energy retrofit decisions in Korea. We find that the research hypotheses for risk and social preferences that we are derived from the model are supported while those for time preference are partially supported. The results are summarized as follows. First, respondents who discount the future more heavily are less likely to plan a home energy retrofit. Second, very risk-averse respondents are less likely to have experienced a home energy retrofit and very risk-seeking ones are more likely to plan a home energy retrofit. Third, those seriously concerned about environmental issues or who strongly respond to moral norms are likely to have experienced or plan a home energy retrofit.
topic home energy retrofit
time preference
risk preference
social preference
probit model
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/8/4152
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