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What if consumers saw the bigger picture? Systems thinking and the adoption of bio-based consumer products

Joana Wensing, Chad M. Baum, Laura Carraresi, Stefanie Bröring

2021Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Systems thinking (ST) represents an important cognitive paradigm for the transition towards a circular bio-economy, as greater awareness of the environmental impact of fossil-based products may lead to a switch to sustainable alternatives produced from secondary biomass which is not used as feed or food. However, the relationship between ST and the adoption of bio-based products, as well as the general mechanism of how ST affects environmental behavior, is not yet well-understood. The present study therefore aims to close these research gaps by conducting a survey-based experiment with a ST-motivated treatment, in which participants are asked to list as many consequences of their consumption behavior as possible (N=446 US consumers). Our findings suggest that the treatment is able to slightly activate a ST perspective, along with indirectly affecting consumer intentions to buy bio-based products by means of ST. Subsequent mediation analyses further reveal that an ecological worldview as well as variables from the norm-activation model function as mediators of the relationship between ST and purchase intention.

Topics & Concepts

Perspective (graphical)MediationSustainable consumptionMarketingConsumption (sociology)Function (biology)BusinessMechanism (biology)CognitionConsumer behaviourNorm (philosophy)PsychologyEconomicsSociologyMicroeconomicsComputer scienceProduction (economics)Political scienceEvolutionary biologyEpistemologyPhilosophyNeuroscienceLawArtificial intelligenceBiologySocial scienceEnvironmental Education and SustainabilitySustainable Supply Chain ManagementInnovation and Socioeconomic Development
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