Abstract

Waste sorting is the cardinal measurement to solve the problem of low efficiency of rural environmental governance and to alleviate environmental pollution by reduction, recycling, and harmlessness in rural areas. However, non-excludable and non-rival features of public goods easily cause a wide free-rider problem, which results in a low frequency of participation in the waste sorting of rural people. Based on the theory of the utility maximization of the rational economic man, this paper investigates survey data of 688 farm households in three cities and three counties of Shaanxi Province to explore the effect of the perceived value on the household waste classification behavior based on cost-benefit analysis. The results show that perceived benefit and perceived cost are important perceived value factors affecting farmers’ participation in waste sorting. Specifically, the spiritual benefit of the perceived benefit has a significantly positive impact on classification behavior, while the time cost, physical cost, and material cost of the perceived cost have a negative impact on waste classification behavior. Further study of the heterogeneity of income impact shows that time cost only has a significant impact on the high-income group of farmers’ classification behavior, while spiritual benefit and learning cost only affect the low-income group of farmers’ waste classification behavior. Material cost has different influence directions on high- and low-income groups. In view of the aforementioned findings, this study highlights corresponding policy implications from the perspective of perceived benefit and perceived cost.

Highlights

  • In recent years, living conditions have greatly improved in rural China

  • The purpose of the paper is to investigate the impact of perceived benefit and perceived cost on waste classification behaviors

  • The estimated results showed that the variance inflation factor (VIF) values of all variables were less than 2, indicating that the possibility of multi-collinearity among variables was very low [63]

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Summary

Introduction

The problem of accumulation of dirt and debris in some areas remains because garbage is not effectively processed. The rural population is 552 million, accounting for more than 39.4% of the total population at the end of 2019 (Published by the China National Bureau of Statistics at http://www.stats.gov.cn). The amount of garbage produced can reach 0.86 kg per person per day (Published by China Environmental Protection at http://www.hbzhan.com), and it can be estimated that the annual domestic waste production in rural areas was about 173 million tons in 2019 (resident population is 205 million). The data show that China produces nearly 1 billion tons of waste every year, including 400 million tons of domestic waste, 500 million tons of construction waste, and 10 million tons of kitchen waste. The amount of waste is growing by 8% to 10% every year in China (Published by the China Association of urban environmental sanitation at http://cnues.com)

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