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Title

Is divorce green? Energy use and marital dissolution.

Authors

Christiansen, Solveig; Skirbekk, Vegard

Abstract

Earlier studies argue that a greater prevalence of divorce increases energy use since divorce increases the number of smaller households that tend to be less energy efficient due to economics of scale. However, divorced individuals also have, on net, considerably lower fertility than individuals who are continuously married. In the current study, we employ a dynamic household projection model that incorporates the effects of divorce on fertility, thereby allowing us to consider both short (40-year horizon) and long-term (exceeding 40 years) effects of divorce on energy consumption. We find that, whereas increased divorce rates lead to higher residential energy use in the short run, divorce is likely to imply lower domestic energy use in the longer term.

Subjects

DIVORCE; ENERGY consumption; DOMICILE in domestic relations; HOUSEHOLDS; HUMAN fertility

Publication

Population & Environment, 2015, Vol 37, Issue 2, p111

ISSN

0199-0039

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s11111-015-0236-5

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