XF-47GQAMA-Z
Research / Academic Paper ACTIVE

Does Better Information Lead to Better Choices? Evidence from Energy-Efficiency Labels

Abstract Only — The full paper PDF is not available in the registry. This XFID was minted from the paper's title, authors, and year. Where available, an abstract is provided below; the link to the publisher's record is canonical.

Abstract

Information provision is a key element of government energy-efficiency policy, but the information that is provided is often too coarse to allow consumers to make efficient decisions. An important example is the ubiquitous yellow “EnergyGuide” label, which is required by law to be displayed on all major appliances sold in the United States. These labels report energy cost information based on average national usage and energy prices. We conduct an online stated-choice experiment to measure the potential welfare benefits from labels tailored to each household’s state of residence. We find that state-specific labels lead to significantly better choices. Consumers choose to invest about the same amount overall in energy efficiency, but the allocation is much better with more investment in high-usage high-price states and less investment in low-usage low-price states.

Source: resolved

Document Metadata

Issuer
University of Chicago Press
Document Type
Research / Academic Paper
Publication Year
2016
Retrieved
5 May 2026
Source
Contact XFID for Access
Record ID
XF47GQAMAZ
Validation
Inferred by XFID

Cited by (1)

Other RESEARCH documents in the registry that cite this work.

How to Cite This Record

Use the XFID in citations to create a stable, permanent reference that resolves to this registry entry regardless of the source URL.

Academic / report citation
University of Chicago Press (2016). Does Better Information Lead to Better Choices? Evidence from Energy-Efficiency Labels. XFID: XF-47GQAMA-Z. Retrieved from https://xframework.id/XF47GQAMAZ
Identifier only
XF-47GQAMA-Z