Gender norms and solar panel energy adoption in Australia: Evidence from a natural experiment
利用澳大利亚殖民时期性别比例失衡作为自然实验,研究发现历史性别比例每增加一个单位,当前每千人光伏安装量增加3.5个,女性议价能力是重要传导渠道。
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the United Kingdom transported convicts to the penal colonies of New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land. Most of the convicts who were sent to the colonies were men. Treating it as a quasi-natural experiment, we employ the gender imbalance associated with this historical event to examine how gender norms influence the adoption of photovoltaic solar panels (PVS) in modern day Australia. Estimates from our preferred instrumental variable specification suggest that a unit increase in the historical sex ratio causes 3.5 more PVS units to be installed per 1000 population. We provide indirect evidence on the role of female bargaining power as a channel. We find that women living in locations which had higher historical sex ratios report being more satisfied with the division of childcare and household responsibilities, consistent with having greater bargaining power. We find that the effect of historical sex ratios on each of these proxies for female bargaining power is moderated by having an Australian-born parent, such that having an Australian-born parent strengthens the relationship, consistent with gender norms being passed down across generations. We also find that the effect of historical sex ratios on female bargaining power is attenuated by internal migration and greater ethnic diversity in the postcode, both of which weaken the vertical transmission of gender norms. • Drawing on a natural experiment from Australia's colonial history, we examine the role of gender norms in influencing renewable energy adoption in the present. • Imbalances in historical sex ratios, which have long dissipated, influence modern-day decisions with respect to renewable energy adoption. • Women have more intrahousehold bargaining power in neighbourhoods in which the sex ratio was historically high and express preferences for sustainable outcomes. • The avenue through which historical imbalances in the sex ratio influence renewable energy decisions in the present is through the vertical transmission of gender norms. • The influence of gender norms is attenuated by immigration and changes in the ethnic composition of the population in.