A couple years ago I wrote a post about a hypothetical sustainability facts label that is analogous to exiting the nutrition facts panels. In that post, I conjectured that a sustainability facts panel might help alleviate some of the misperceptions some consumers have with regard to various labeling claims. Turns out Sofia Villas-Boas at Berkeley and Zack Neuhofer, a PhD student working with me at Purdue, were simultaneously having similar ideas. As such, we teamed up to test some of these conjectures.
The result is a new paper forthcoming in Applied Economics Perspectives and Policy. Here’s the abstract.
Kudos to Zack who did the heavy lifting on this project. As it turns out, we didn’t find much support for the original conjecture but instead found a more complex and nuanced set of reactions to “objective” sustainability labels.