The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption

This thesis investigates how the energy intensity of consumption is affected by an increase in non-work time by estimating how retirement affects the consumption of gasoline and air travel. An estimable model is derived from Becker's (1965) theory of time allocation which is then estimated for a sam...

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Main Author: Stråle, Jonathan
Format: H2
Language:Inglés
Published: SLU/Dept. of Economics 2016
Subjects:
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author Stråle, Jonathan
author_browse Stråle, Jonathan
author_facet Stråle, Jonathan
author_sort Stråle, Jonathan
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description This thesis investigates how the energy intensity of consumption is affected by an increase in non-work time by estimating how retirement affects the consumption of gasoline and air travel. An estimable model is derived from Becker's (1965) theory of time allocation which is then estimated for a sample of 58-68 year old full-time workers and retired individuals that is taken from the 2014 Consumer Expenditure Survey made by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Together with the estimation of a secondary model, it is found that retirement increases total energy intensity of consumption through an increase in airfare expenditure together with a slight decrease in gasoline expenditure. A simple test for extrapolation further suggests that extrapolation of the results for the whole working population might be possible.
format H2
id RepoSLU9505
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher SLU/Dept. of Economics
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spelling RepoSLU95052016-08-23T13:42:48Z The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption Stråle, Jonathan consumption energy-intensity of consumption time allocation time effects retirement consumption This thesis investigates how the energy intensity of consumption is affected by an increase in non-work time by estimating how retirement affects the consumption of gasoline and air travel. An estimable model is derived from Becker's (1965) theory of time allocation which is then estimated for a sample of 58-68 year old full-time workers and retired individuals that is taken from the 2014 Consumer Expenditure Survey made by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Together with the estimation of a secondary model, it is found that retirement increases total energy intensity of consumption through an increase in airfare expenditure together with a slight decrease in gasoline expenditure. A simple test for extrapolation further suggests that extrapolation of the results for the whole working population might be possible. SLU/Dept. of Economics 2016 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9505/
spellingShingle consumption
energy-intensity of consumption
time allocation
time effects
retirement consumption
Stråle, Jonathan
The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption
title The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption
title_full The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption
title_fullStr The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption
title_full_unstemmed The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption
title_short The effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption
title_sort effects of increased non-work time on the energy intensity of consumption
topic consumption
energy-intensity of consumption
time allocation
time effects
retirement consumption