Rising U.S. Income Inequality and Declining Residential Electricity Consumption: Is There a Link?

Joshua Linn, Jing Liang, Yueming (Lucy) Qiu
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Abstract

Abstract After growing steadily for decades, in the mid-2000s, average US household energy consumption began declining. Using household-level data from the Residential Energy Consumption Survey and Current Population Survey between 1990 and 2020, we decompose overall changes in per-household consumption into three components: a) average income; b) cross-household income distribution; and c) consumption habits, which include energy efficiency. Growth of average income caused consumption to increase by 11 percent, and rising income inequality reduced consumption by 8 percent, nearly entirely offsetting the effect of income growth. Changes in habits also reduced consumption. Back-of-the-envelope calculations indicate an unexpected effect of rising income inequality: climate and air quality improvements valued at $9 billion in 2020 due to lower electricity consumption. The results indicate the importance of coordinating policies that address inequality and pollution.
美国收入不平等加剧与居民用电量下降:有联系吗?
在经历了几十年的稳定增长之后,在2000年代中期,美国家庭平均能源消耗开始下降。利用1990年至2020年住宅能源消费调查和当前人口调查的家庭层面数据,我们将每户消费的总体变化分解为三个组成部分:a)平均收入;B)跨家庭收入分配;c)消费习惯,包括能源效率。平均收入的增长使消费增加了11%,收入不平等的加剧使消费减少了8%,几乎完全抵消了收入增长的影响。习惯的改变也减少了消费。粗略的计算表明,收入不平等加剧带来了意想不到的影响:由于用电量减少,到2020年,气候和空气质量的改善价值将达到90亿美元。结果表明协调政策解决不平等和污染的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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