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Seeing the world through GREEN‐tinted glasses: Green consumption values and responses to environmentally friendly products
Authors:Kelly L. Haws  Karen Page Winterich  Rebecca Walker Naylor
Affiliation:1. Owen Graduate School of Management, 401 21st Ave South, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37203, USA;2. Smeal College of Business, Pennsylvania State University, 449 Business Building, University Park, PA, 16802, USA;3. Fisher College of Business, The Ohio State University, 2100 Neil Avenue, 538 Fisher Hall, Columbus, OH 43210, USA
Abstract:The primary goal of this research is to conceptualize and develop a scale of green consumption values, which we define as the tendency to express the value of environmental protection through one's purchases and consumption behaviors. Across six studies, we demonstrate that the six-item measure we develop (i.e., the GREEN scale) can be used to capture green consumption values in a reliable, valid, and parsimonious manner. We further theorize and empirically demonstrate that green consumption values are part of a larger nomological network associated with conservation of not just environmental resources but also personal financial and physical resources. Finally, we demonstrate that the GREEN scale predicts consumer preference for environmentally friendly products. In doing so, we demonstrate that stronger green consumption values increase preference for environmentally friendly products through more favorable evaluations of the non-environmental attributes of these products. These results have important implications for consumer responses to the growing number of environmentally friendly products.
Keywords:Sustainability  Scale development  Environmental marketing  Green marketing  Motivated reasoning
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