Quasi-Experimental Evidence on the Impact of State Recycling and Deposit Laws: Household Recycling Following Interstate Moves

Author:

Viscusi W Kip1,Huber Joel2,Bell Jason2

Affiliation:

1. Vanderbilt Law School

2. Duke University

Abstract

Abstract This article estimates the effects on recycling behavior of state recycling laws and deposit laws based on changes in household recycling before and after interstate moves. Estimates from a national panel dataset of 1,498 households who moved between states provide a quasi-experimental test otherwise not possible given long-term stability of such laws in any state. Compared to national average recycling rates, moves to states with deposits for beverage containers increased the number of material types recycled by 41%. More stringent recycling laws are also effective, but they have a smaller impact. Recycling laws boosted the number of materials recycled by 9%, with the largest effect being the 17% increase in the recycling rate for glass. Moves from states with deposit laws to states without such laws decreased the number of materials recycled by 13%. Shifts out of states with stringent laws only had statistically significant effects for plastic, which exhibited a 12% decrease after such a move.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Law,Finance

Reference17 articles.

1. “Curbside Recycling: Waste Resource or Waste of Resources?”;Aadland;Journal of Policy Analysis and Management,2006

2. “Cash Recycling, Waste Disposal Costs, and the Incomes of the Working Poor: Evidence from California,”;Ashenmiller;Land Economics,2009

3. “Fostering Recycling Participation in Wisconsin Households through Single-Stream Programs.”;Bell;Land Economics,2017

4. “The Impacts of Neighborhoods on Intergenerational Mobility I: Childhood Exposure Effects,”;Chetty;The Quarterly Journal of Economics,2018

5. “Dynamic Relationships between Social Norms and Pro-environmental Behavior: Evidence from Household Recycling.”;Huber;Behavioural Public Policy,2018

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