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The role of habit loop formation and social norms in promoting eco-friendly behavior: A study on reusable bag usage post plastic tax abolition

Jakobsson, Kristopher LU (2025) PSYP01 20251
Department of Psychology
Abstract
This study investigated the influence of habit strength and perceived social norms on Swedish residents continued use of reusable bags following the removal of the plastic bag tax. A cross-sectional survey (N = 93) measured participants’ habit strength, perception of social norms, and frequency of reusable bag usage. Descriptive statistics indicated variability in habit and social norm scores, and skewness within acceptable limits for parametric analysis. Pearson’s correlations showed strong positive associations between habit strength and reusable bag usage, and moderate positive associations between social norms and usage. A multiple regression analysis revealed that habit strength (β = .66, p < .001) and social norms (β = 0.52, p =... (More)
This study investigated the influence of habit strength and perceived social norms on Swedish residents continued use of reusable bags following the removal of the plastic bag tax. A cross-sectional survey (N = 93) measured participants’ habit strength, perception of social norms, and frequency of reusable bag usage. Descriptive statistics indicated variability in habit and social norm scores, and skewness within acceptable limits for parametric analysis. Pearson’s correlations showed strong positive associations between habit strength and reusable bag usage, and moderate positive associations between social norms and usage. A multiple regression analysis revealed that habit strength (β = .66, p < .001) and social norms (β = 0.52, p = .013) were significant positive predictors of reusable bag usage, while their interaction had a significant negative effect (β = –0.83, p = .019), suggesting that social norms are less influential when habits are strong. The overall model explained 54% of the variance in reusable bag usage. Findings support the view that habits may override social influence once established, highlighting the importance of habit formation in sustaining pro-environmental behaviors. Limitations include reliance on self-report data, cross-sectional design, convenience sampling, multicollinearity, and minor violations of regression assumptions. Future research should employ longitudinal or experimental designs, larger samples, and more precise habit measures to further examine the interplay between habits and social norms in sustainable behavior. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Jakobsson, Kristopher LU
supervisor
organization
course
PSYP01 20251
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Habit strength, social norms, reusable bags, plastic bag tax, pro-environmental behavior, Sweden, sustainable behavior
language
English
id
9214344
date added to LUP
2025-10-22 14:12:16
date last changed
2025-10-22 14:12:16
@misc{9214344,
  abstract     = {{This study investigated the influence of habit strength and perceived social norms on Swedish residents continued use of reusable bags following the removal of the plastic bag tax. A cross-sectional survey (N = 93) measured participants’ habit strength, perception of social norms, and frequency of reusable bag usage. Descriptive statistics indicated variability in habit and social norm scores, and skewness within acceptable limits for parametric analysis. Pearson’s correlations showed strong positive associations between habit strength and reusable bag usage, and moderate positive associations between social norms and usage. A multiple regression analysis revealed that habit strength (β = .66, p < .001) and social norms (β = 0.52, p = .013) were significant positive predictors of reusable bag usage, while their interaction had a significant negative effect (β = –0.83, p = .019), suggesting that social norms are less influential when habits are strong. The overall model explained 54% of the variance in reusable bag usage. Findings support the view that habits may override social influence once established, highlighting the importance of habit formation in sustaining pro-environmental behaviors. Limitations include reliance on self-report data, cross-sectional design, convenience sampling, multicollinearity, and minor violations of regression assumptions. Future research should employ longitudinal or experimental designs, larger samples, and more precise habit measures to further examine the interplay between habits and social norms in sustainable behavior.}},
  author       = {{Jakobsson, Kristopher}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{The role of habit loop formation and social norms in promoting eco-friendly behavior: A study on reusable bag usage post plastic tax abolition}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}