Accounting for Endogeneity in Rebound Effects
Abstract
Rebound effects are a natural outcome in various applied economic settings. For example, in thestudy of land use and farm productivity, the rebound effect captures how improvements in
technological change and technical efficiency increase land use. In addition, indirect rebound
effects may also result from the adoption of energy efficient products or policies. However, an
issue that has been ignored to date is the likely endogeneity in these settings. This paper reviews the rebound effect literature and proposes a model that deals with the endogeneity of rebound effects by modeling this effect directly into the technology as opposed to using a conventional two-stage setup in productivity analysis. We show how existing methods have upward biases on the rebound effect and how our model corrects for this bias. Ultimately, our results suggest that the importance of the rebound effects stemming from productivity improvements should not be underestimated and should be modeled properly.