The Impact of Income Inequality on Sustainable Consumption

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenKonferenzaufsätze in FachzeitschriftenForschungbegutachtet

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The Impact of Income Inequality on Sustainable Consumption. / Hörisch, Jacob; Brieger, Steven A.; Zhang, Xinyu.
in: Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings, Jahrgang 2025, Nr. 1, 17.06.2025, S. 12541.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenKonferenzaufsätze in FachzeitschriftenForschungbegutachtet

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Hörisch J, Brieger SA, Zhang X. The Impact of Income Inequality on Sustainable Consumption. Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings. 2025 Jun 17;2025(1):12541. doi: 10.5465.AMPROC.2025.323bp

Bibtex

@article{16be0f4d42ad4af48aeadf17dac5b975,
title = "The Impact of Income Inequality on Sustainable Consumption",
abstract = "This research explores the interplay between income inequality and sustainable consumption, highlighting how socioeconomic disparaties shape consumer behavior. Using secondary data fraom 20 countries, a vignette experiment, and UK survey data, we find that both objective and perceived high levels of income inequality reduce sustainable consumption. Drawing on norm activation theory, we show that rising inequality diminishes consumers´sense of responsibility for environmental outcomes and reduces their awareness of the environmental impact of their consumption choices. Our findings emphasize the interconnected nature of social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development. Reducing income inequality emerges as a pathway to foster sustainable consumption, suggesting that redistributive policies may not only promote equity but also enhance environmental outcomes. We also discuss how businesses and policymakers can mitigate the negative effects of inequality on sustainable consumption by promoting low-cost sustainability practices, leveraging impact labeling, and empowering consumers in regions with high inequality.",
author = "Jacob H{\"o}risch and Brieger, {Steven A.} and Xinyu Zhang",
year = "2025",
month = jun,
day = "17",
doi = "10.5465.AMPROC.2025.323bp",
language = "English",
volume = "2025",
pages = "12541",
journal = "Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings",
issn = "0065-0668",
publisher = "Academy of Management (Briarcliff Manor, NY) ",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Impact of Income Inequality on Sustainable Consumption

AU - Hörisch, Jacob

AU - Brieger, Steven A.

AU - Zhang, Xinyu

PY - 2025/6/17

Y1 - 2025/6/17

N2 - This research explores the interplay between income inequality and sustainable consumption, highlighting how socioeconomic disparaties shape consumer behavior. Using secondary data fraom 20 countries, a vignette experiment, and UK survey data, we find that both objective and perceived high levels of income inequality reduce sustainable consumption. Drawing on norm activation theory, we show that rising inequality diminishes consumers´sense of responsibility for environmental outcomes and reduces their awareness of the environmental impact of their consumption choices. Our findings emphasize the interconnected nature of social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development. Reducing income inequality emerges as a pathway to foster sustainable consumption, suggesting that redistributive policies may not only promote equity but also enhance environmental outcomes. We also discuss how businesses and policymakers can mitigate the negative effects of inequality on sustainable consumption by promoting low-cost sustainability practices, leveraging impact labeling, and empowering consumers in regions with high inequality.

AB - This research explores the interplay between income inequality and sustainable consumption, highlighting how socioeconomic disparaties shape consumer behavior. Using secondary data fraom 20 countries, a vignette experiment, and UK survey data, we find that both objective and perceived high levels of income inequality reduce sustainable consumption. Drawing on norm activation theory, we show that rising inequality diminishes consumers´sense of responsibility for environmental outcomes and reduces their awareness of the environmental impact of their consumption choices. Our findings emphasize the interconnected nature of social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development. Reducing income inequality emerges as a pathway to foster sustainable consumption, suggesting that redistributive policies may not only promote equity but also enhance environmental outcomes. We also discuss how businesses and policymakers can mitigate the negative effects of inequality on sustainable consumption by promoting low-cost sustainability practices, leveraging impact labeling, and empowering consumers in regions with high inequality.

U2 - 10.5465.AMPROC.2025.323bp

DO - 10.5465.AMPROC.2025.323bp

M3 - Conference article in journal

VL - 2025

SP - 12541

JO - Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings

JF - Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings

SN - 0065-0668

IS - 1

ER -

DOI