Moderating effect of subsidy policy on intention to purchase residential rooftop solar panel systems

Kumar, G and Nayak, J K (2024) Moderating effect of subsidy policy on intention to purchase residential rooftop solar panel systems. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 14(4), pp. 626-643. ISSN 2044-124X

Abstract

Purpose: The adoption of residential rooftop solar panel systems (SPS) in India is at a nascent stage. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the factors affecting consumers' intention to purchase SPS by expanding the theory of planned behavior (TPB) with three environmental psychology factors. The study was targeted at potential users' intention to purchase SPS, thus it further explored the moderating role of perceived government subsidy policy (PGSP) in determining consumers' purchase intention of SPS. Design/methodology/approach: Using G*power software, the minimum sample size of 189 was calculated; accordingly, 292 valid responses were gathered from potential users of SPS from three Indian states, namely Rajasthan, Punjab and Haryana, via an online questionnaire survey with the help of purposive sampling method. Structural equation modeling technique of partial least squares was employed to analyze the data. Findings: Results demonstrated that attitude, subjective norms, perceived behavioral control, perceived consumer effectiveness (PCE) and PGSP significantly influence purchase intention of SPS. Green trust and green self-identity did not influence the purchase intention of SPS. Further, PGSP strengthens the effect of attitude, green trust, PCE on purchase intention of SPS while it weakens the effect of subjective norms on purchase intention of SPS. Originality/value: This study contributes to the existing literature by integrating green trust, green self-identity, PCE and PGSP into the TPB model to better understand factors affecting consumers' purchase intention towards SPS in India.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: green self-identity; green trust; perceived consumer effectiveness; perceived government subsidy policy; purchase intention; solar panel systems
Date Deposited: 11 Apr 2025 13:56
Last Modified: 11 Apr 2025 13:56