Household water savings and response to dynamic incentives under nonlinear pricing

Li Li, Marc Jeuland

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

We study the response of residential water demand to nonlinear prices by exploiting a natural experiment arising from a water pricing reform in a major Chinese city. The reform introduced an unconventional Increasing Block Tariff featuring prices set according to annual cumulative consumption and a bimonthly billing cycle. Analyzing data from a household survey and administrative water bills, we detect a small effect on low-use households but find large water savings among high-use households. Moreover, we find strong evidence that high-use households respond to future price while current price remains fixed, and that the small share of households who appear myopic do not respond to dynamic incentives.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102811
JournalJournal of Environmental Economics and Management
Volume119
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2023

Keywords

  • Dynamic incentives
  • Household water demand
  • Increasing block tariff
  • Nonlinear pricing
  • Water saving

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