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2023 Annual Conference

May 16–18, 2023

Palace Station Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, NV, US

IMPORTANT NOTICE: The date, time, and room assignment of YOUR presentation is SUBJECT TO CHANGE.

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Confirm your place in the schedule by following the instructionss that were emailed to you. Each presentation must have a separate paid registration. Contact the ACCI office immedicately by email at admin@consumerinterests.org to report any conflict, all corrections to the details of the presentation (including author names and the order they are listed as this is how it will be in the final program), or if you have any questions. Please be sure to reference the session title(s), date(s), and time(s) when you contact us.

203 Consumer Self-determination and Psychological Well-being in Sustainable Consumption

Wednesday, May 17, 2023 at 5:15 PM–6:15 PM PDT
Room 5 Posters
Short Description

This study examines how the policy approaches that induce consumers to make sustainable choices by restricting their free choice are associated with the autonomy and psychological well-being they experience in the consumption process. A 2x2 experimental survey was conducted through an external stimulus that induced a positive perception of community-oriented sustainable consumption and an online shopping environment that limited their ability to make sustainable choices. Regression analyses indicated that consumers in the voluntary product selection had higher autonomy levels than those in the involuntary product selection in both the community-oriented sustainable consumption encouraged and self-oriented cost-effective consumption encouraged groups. A one-way ANOVA showed that the consumers in the voluntary and cost-effective consumption encouraged condition had significantly higher autonomy than the consumers in the involuntary and sustainable consumption encouraged condition. A mediated effect analysis showed that autonomy mediated the relationship between voluntariness and self-esteem, although voluntariness did not significantly improve self-esteem in the regression analysis. The results suggest that the approach of forcing consumers to make desirable choices through policy may be limited in maintaining consumers’ autonomous practice, even though sustainable consumption based on voluntariness can increase consumer self-esteem. Policy systems should aim to increase consumers’ voluntariness for socially responsible behavior.

Type of presentation

Accepted Poster Presentation

Submitter

Harim Yeo, Gallup Korea

Authors

Hyesun Hwang, Sungkyunkwan University
Harim Yeo, Gallup Korea
Eunbi Kang, Sungkyunkwan University
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