1. Introduction
Rural household waste sorting is an important initiative to promote the improvement of rural habitats and build a beautiful countryside, and it is an important way to cope with the contradictions of economic development and green energy constraints [
1]. In recent years, with the continuous economic and social development of some countries, farmers’ income has continued to improve, and their consumption patterns and consumption structure have undergone many important changes. With this, the production of various types of food packaging, various types of food waste and other household waste in rural areas has continued to increase [
2]. This phenomenon is particularly prevalent in developing countries such as China [
3]. According to the results of China’s seventh census in 2021, the population living in rural areas is 509.79 million. The average rural household produces 0.8 kg of household waste per person per day, which means that about 204 million tonnes of household waste are produced in rural areas every year. Nearly a quarter of household waste is not adequately sorted and recycled [
4]. In addition, rural pollution is widespread, farmers’ awareness of environmental protection is weak and the lack of support systems for waste treatment has made the environmental pollution problem caused by rural domestic waste more and more serious [
5]. This has had a significant negative impact on farmers’ quality of life and physical health, the public image of the government and the quality of economic development in China [
6]. Encouraging farmers to participate in waste segregation and recycling is the most economical and effective measure to solve the problem of rural waste pollution. It is also an important concern for government policy formulation [
7,
8]. For example, the Ministry of Housing and Urban Rural Development of China issued the “Several Opinions on Further Promoting the Classification of Domestic Waste” in 2020, which stated that “it is encouraged to explore and utilize technological means such as big data, artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things, the internet, and mobile apps to promote the development of industries related to domestic waste classification”. Similar studies from Malaysia [
9], Latin American and Caribbean countries [
10], Pakistan [
11] and others have also confirmed these findings. Therefore, one of the important research topics of environmental economics is to clarify the factors influencing farmers’ domestic-waste-sorting behavior and to find more efficient and economical solutions to improve farmers’ participation in domestic waste sorting, which also has positive implications for the policy of precision supply. It is of great theoretical importance and practical value to study this issue in depth.
Scholars have studied the factors that influence farmers’ domestic waste sorting behavior in depth. The study of farmers’ domestic-waste-sorting behavior is a cross-disciplinary study that includes areas of research from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds in economics, management, environmental science, psychology and agricultural science. In terms of individual characteristics, farmers’ gender [
12], age [
13], household income [
14] and political status [
15] may all influence farmers’ attitudes towards domestic waste sorting. In terms of intrinsic cognition, Arminda and Tânia (2017) [
16] argue that cognition has a significant impact on behavior and that individuals’ perceptions of the environment can influence environmental decisions. For example, trust mechanisms between individuals can effectively address the cognitive-behavioral transition puzzle [
17], and psychological qualities are an important factor influencing people’s internal perceptions [
18]. Farmers’ educational level [
19,
20], residential living habits [
21], internal belief characteristics [
22] and adherence to moral ethics also drive changes in farmers’ household-waste-sorting behavior. At the social level, social capital [
23], socially shared moral and value systems [
24] and class characteristics [
25] also unconsciously influence farmers’ internal perceptions and shape their behavioral characteristics related to environmental protection. In terms of external scenarios, shifts in government policy supply [
26], changes in rural infrastructure [
27] and improvements in the regulatory system for domestic waste recycling may influence individuals’ perceptions and behaviors. Looking further, technological progress is also an important variable in changing farmers’ behavior [
28]. The development of information and communication technology, the widespread use of the internet and farmers’ original access to information are significantly enhanced, and the probability of moral hazards due to information asymmetry is significantly reduced [
29]. ICT is an important representative feature of technological progress, and the use of communication technology may change the original social development pattern and research paradigm. Therefore, exploring the changes in farmers’ intrinsic environmental perceptions after the use of ICT and its relationship with farmers’ domestic waste separation is an advancement and extension of the existing research and has marginal advancement significance. As time changes, ICT-driven coercive or induced institutional changes occur gradually, the external conditions of people’s behavior may change and cognitive changes may be subtle, making farmers’ domestic-waste-sorting behavior change [
30].
Specifically, the development of information and communication technology and the use of the internet may have direct and indirect effects on farmers’ domestic ICT use and may affect the way rural residents obtain information, change farmers’ education levels and skills and improve the way policies are delivered, thus directly influencing individual farmers’ behavior. In addition, ICT use may lead to changes in people’s internal perceptions, which in turn may affect individual farmers’ behavior based on the perceived changes [
31]. That is, ICT use may also affect the perception of environmental quality, which in turn may affect farmers’ household-waste-sorting behavior. From this, it can be concluded that the possible mechanisms by which the use of the internet may affect an individual’s behavior may have direct mechanisms and indirect channels of action through perceived environmental quality. A systematic summary of the relationship between farmers’ perceptions of environmental quality and household waste sorting after ICT use will not only help to refine the mechanisms underlying the effect of ICT use on individual farmers’ environmental behavior but also help to provide accurate policy guidance in developing countries when promoting the use of the internet. Based on this, this paper is an attempt to empirically test the effect of ICT use on rural household waste sorting and the mediating effect of environmental quality perceptions in it by using data from a survey of 2126 farmers in China and to analyze the possible heterogeneity of different groups of farmers in it.
The main innovations of this paper are as follows: First, it somewhat expands the research on the influence of ICT and farmers’ domestic waste sorting. Previous studies in the literature may have studied individual farmers’ behavior only in terms of internal and external factors, ignoring the fact that ICT as an emerging variable exerts a dual mechanism on farmers’ internal cognition and external situation, which in turn acts on individual farmers’ behavior. Second, the association between ICT use and residents’ perceptions and residents’ environmental behaviors in the digital era is constructed, and the findings of the study can provide some basis for decision-making in the new era of policy adjustment. As people pay more and more attention to their own perceptions and intrinsic feelings, it makes changes in feelings and personal evaluations play an increasingly important influence on individual behaviors. We need to consider not only the impact a variable may have on external variables but also the change in people’s internal perceptions. The understanding will be more in-depth and detailed. Third, the survey uses data to empirically verify this effect, and through rigorous data modelling and testing, it becomes possible to draw more precise conclusions, and policy development may become more in-depth and detailed.
The paper is structured as follows:
Section 2 presents the theoretical and research hypotheses of the paper.
Section 3 presents the study’ data sources, study design and descriptive statistics.
Section 4 analyzes the heterogeneity and robustness tests of ICT use and the perceived environmental quality on farmers’ domestic waste sorting.
Section 5 shows the conclusions and makes policy recommendations.
3. Model and Variables
3.1. Model Design
This paper examined the relationship between ICT use, perceived environmental quality and farmers’ domestic waste sorting. A mediating effects model was needed to identify the possible mediating effects of environmental quality perceptions. Referring to the way [
40,
41] set up their model, the empirical analysis model was constructed as follows:
In Equation (1), represents perceived environmental quality, represents ICT use, represents the combination of control variables that may have an effect on perceived environmental quality and represents a residual term. In Equation (2), represents the variable of farmers’ participation in domestic waste sorting, and have the same meaning as in Equation (1), represents a combination of other control variables that may have an impact on farmers’ participation in domestic waste sorting and represents a residual term. The three core variable relationships of interest in this paper were identified according to the way the model of mediating effects is set up. When the regression coefficient of in Equation (1) is significant, it represents a significant effect of ICT use on farmers’ perceptions of environmental quality, and when the regression coefficients and of and in Equation (2) are also significant, they represent the ability of ICT use to influence domestic waste sorting through farmers’ perceptions of environmental quality. It is noteworthy that this mediating effect of environmental quality perception is complete when is not significant but is significant. In the process of calculation, in the base process, we used the OLS model for regression processing, and for more robust conclusions, Oprobit model processing was also adopted. Considering that the two core variables of environmental quality perception and domestic waste classification were chosen with an obvious ordering, both are discrete ordering variables, which are suitable for the ordered probability model, and the ordered probability model was used in the calculation process for model measurement.
3.2. Data Sources
A micro-survey is related to a macro-survey, and its main subject is the micro-individual, with a systematic investigation of micro-individuals in all aspects of a specific situation. A micro-survey is a better way to understand individual behaviors in detail and to study the laws behind individual behaviors. In this study, the survey was conducted by surveying farmers one by one, which is a typical micro-survey method. Questionnaire research is one of the most important ways to obtain data for studies, and we used questionnaire research to obtain the data we needed to use in conducting this study. The questionnaire was distributed on a trial basis in some areas in the previous period, and the collected data and recommendations were revised to form the final distribution data. Based on the final questionnaire, a large-scale data distribution was conducted, and the time period for collecting the data was from April 2020 to July 2020. We organized a wide range of undergraduate and some graduate students from Ningbo University as data collectors. In order to ensure the reliability of the data obtained, training was conducted for each participant, and each person was asked to collect no more than 10 copies of data. Based on the differences in the economic and social environments in eastern, central and western China, we selected 11 provinces in China and randomly selected counties and villages in each province. Then, we conducted the questionnaire research one by one in order to guarantee a more extensive and differentiated data acquisition. More than 2200 questionnaires were returned in the survey, and some missing values and some values that did not match the actual situation were found in the collation. After deleting these data, the number of questionnaires that could be used in the article was 2126.
We tried to sort the basic data of the questionnaires (see
Table 1). A total of 46.52% of the sample was male, and the three variables age, net income and degree were also widely distributed. A total of 5.93% of the sample of village cadres, 16.42% of the sample of Chinese Communist Party members and 16.42% of the sample whose main income came from agricultural income made up 82.97% of the total sample, and 58.75% of the sample came from eastern China, with relatively more samples being obtained from the eastern region. Overall, the sample data were widely distributed and were representative of the actual situation in rural China.
3.3. Variables
3.3.1. Separation of Farmers’ Domestic Waste (Dws)
To measure this variable, and referring to the existing studies by [
1,
42], the questionnaire included the question, “how do you dispose of your household waste?” If the answer was not to sort the garbage, a value of 1 was assigned. Only those that could be sold for value were selected for classification, and this option was assigned a value of 2. After sorting those that could be sold for value, food waste was also sorted, and this option was assigned a value of 3. After sorting food waste that could be sold for value, hazardous waste was also sorted, and this option was assigned a value of 4. The statistics of the farmers’ domestic waste classification showed (see
Table 2) that 1180 samples of the survey reported mixing domestic waste. That is to say that 55.50% of the farmers did not classify their domestic waste finely into three categories of treatment and four categories of treatment, and the proportion was 13.17% and 6.07%, respectively. This indicated that there are still a large proportion of rural areas in China where improvements to the space of rural household waste classification and treatment can be made, especially in some areas where the establishment of a waste-free zone is required. There is still a greater degree of need to guide farmers to participate more in waste classification and treatment.
3.3.2. Environmental Quality Satisfaction (Eqp)
In previous studies, a five-point scale has been used to measure residents’ perceptions of environmental quality [
40], and with reference to the existing studies, we also used the question “Satisfaction with local environmental quality” to carefully identify the perceptions of environmental quality. The perception of environmental quality was an ordinal selection variable that was defined as follows: very dissatisfied = 1; relatively dissatisfied = 2; general = 3; relatively satisfied = 4; very satisfied = 5. According to the statistics, that the mean value of the perception of environmental quality was 3.456, and the standard deviation was 0.864.
3.3.3. ICT Use
ICT use is a variable that has received more widespread attention. The measurement of ICT use is divided into two broad areas: the adoption of ICT variables and the frequency of the use of ICT. In this study, the ICT adoption variable was used, and this measure is a relatively common and mature measure, which has been corroborated in the existing literature and has yielded relatively good results [
43].
ICT use is the most typical result of digital technology applications in rural areas. The use of mobile phones, computers and other equipment is often used to measure ICT use in micro-survey data, and this approach has been widely validated in existing studies [
40]. To better measure ICT use, we set the question “Do you use mobile phones, computers and other equipment to obtain information?” to identify ICT use, with reference to the existing studies of [
41]. Farmers who used the internet answered yes, and those who did not use the internet answered no. According to the statistics, the number of farmers that used the internet among the 2126 rural households studied was 1683, reaching 79.16% of the total sample, which was higher than the average percentage of rural internet use in 2020 announced by China. The reason was that we had more samples from the eastern part of China in this survey, which is relatively developed and has richer access to information. This situation is in line with the rural reality.
The percentage of farmers using ICT who participated in waste separation was significantly higher than that of farmers using ICT who did not participate in waste separation. It was preliminarily seen that farmers using ICT were more inclined to participate in waste separation, but of course this conclusion was subject to the next empirical verification. The proportion of farmers using ICT who rated environmental quality as better was not significantly higher than the proportion of farmers using ICT who rated environmental quality as worse. It was preliminarily seen that farmers who used ICT did not evaluate environmental quality as better. There may be a negative relationship between ICT use and farmers’ perception of environmental quality.
3.3.4. Control Variables
According to previous studies, gender, age, education, income status, identity characteristics, village characteristics and surroundings may be influential factors in farmers’ behavior [
44,
45]. However, these variables were not the main variables of interest in this paper, so they were used as control variables to control for the possible effects of factors other than the core explanatory variables on the explained variables and to make the findings more robust [
46]. For this purpose, this paper collected issues related to the individual characteristics of farmers and their business characteristics, external characteristics and geographical characteristics as control variables. The specific meanings and statistical values are shown in
Table 3. The distribution of the control variables was seen to overall be relatively broad and representative and suitable for empirical analysis.
5. Conclusions and Policy Implications
5.1. Conclusions and Limitations
Improving rural habitats is a key task proposed for implementation in China’s Central Document No. 1, and encouraging farmers to participate in domestic waste separation is an important measure to optimize farmers’ habitats and build a beautiful countryside. The detailed study of the impact of the use of emerging communication technology on farmers’ domestic waste sorting and the exploration of the possible mechanisms of action based on a new subjective perspective of environmental quality perceptions in this paper established a good connection between how new technology, an external scenario, affected farmers’ internal perceptions and thus drove their environmental behavior. This study is both in line with current policy practice and has positive implications for the expansion of research perspectives on farmers’ domestic waste separation. Thus, this paper empirically investigated the relationship between ICT use, perceived environmental quality and farmers’ domestic waste separation using OLS and ordered probability models using data from a sample of 2126 farmers obtained from a Chinese micro-survey, and it screened the mediating role of perceived environmental quality in the impact of ICT use on farmers’ domestic waste separation. The results were as follows.
First, ICT use had a significant negative effect on farmers’ perceptions of environmental quality, meaning that farmers who used ICT rated environmental quality lower compared to those who did not use ICT, validating the correctness of Hypothesis 1, and this was consistent with the findings of [
40,
41]. This indicated that farmers may be exposed to the negative effects of environmental pollution and prone to negative bias after using the internet. With the rapid development of ICT technology, when ICT changes the external world, it also gradually changes the internal mechanisms of economic agents, a fact which has been ignored in previous studies by treating human perception as a fixed variable. In fact, in terms of economic development, people are paying more and more attention to their inner feelings, and their inner needs are gradually recovering, a trend that deserves attention and a factor in the formulation of policies that needs to be paid attention to.
Second, ICT use had a significant positive effect on farmers’ domestic waste sorting, indicating that farmers who used ICT were more willing to carry out domestic waste sorting, which verified Hypothesis 2. This was different from people’s intrinsic perception of this effect and also indicated that ICT use did expand farmers’ cognitive horizons, played an environmental education role and encouraged farmers’ environmental protection decisions to be more rational.
Third, there was a negative indirect effect of farmers’ environmental quality perception between ICT use and farmers’ participation in domestic waste sorting. That is, after ICT use, farmers’ perception of environmental quality may have indirectly reduced farmers’ domestic waste behavior through using ICT. However, overall ICT use had a greater direct positive effect on farmers’ domestic waste sorting than a negative indirect effect through environmental quality perception, and eventually, farmers who used ICT were more willing to participate in domestic waste sorting. This suggests that farmers may be inclined to whine and express dissatisfaction on the internet yet behave in a way that is participatory in terms of waste separation. This analysis was consistent with the actual situation and psychological characteristics of Chinese farmers. The above three conclusions still held after a rigorous robustness test.
Fourth, the heterogeneity analysis showed that compared to farmers aged 40 and below, internet use by farmers aged above 40 had a significantly negative impact on their environmental quality assessment and a quite positive impact on the level of rural household waste segregation, and an effective mediating mechanism existed that influenced the level of rural household waste segregation through environmental quality assessment. Compared with the high-income group, farmers in the low-income group had higher satisfaction and satisfaction after using ICT, and they were more willing to participate in waste separation and recycling more actively. The mechanism of suppressing the willingness of farmers to participate in rural waste separation and recycling through environmental quality assessment to some extent was more evident in the high-income group. This finding provides empirical evidence to support the impact of ICT use on the wellbeing of relatively older, low-income groups.
At the same time, we also found a number of limitations to this article, which we need to overcome in our subsequent research. For example, frequency variables could be used to measure ICT use; however, due to the lack of data available to us, there was no way to carry out a good validation, and there is room for further improvement in the selection of some control variables. This does not mean that this study is not relevant. In fact, this research work provides an interesting perspective on environmental issues and can provide some insight into the existing literature. It also suggests that more detailed and comprehensive thinking is needed in our ongoing work on similar studies in order to make this area of work more solid and inclusive.
5.2. Policy Implications
First, as new communication technologies become widespread in the world, policy makers should gradually pay more attention to the intrinsic perceptions of residents. In similar countries to China, when promoting ICT and improving technical conditions in rural areas, the inner feelings and inner wellbeing of farmers should be taken into account in policy considerations, and more attention should be paid to these people. Attention should be paid to enhancing farmers’ inner happiness and their environmental quality education by strengthening their education in using ICT platforms to channel and guide their inner emotions and negative feelings.
Second, when carrying out rural household waste sorting, more attention should be paid to combining online channels and using new technologies and tools so that rural residents can have better access to ICT technology and truly benefit from its use. Attention should be paid to strengthening the management of false information and rumors on ICT platforms to purify the network and the interconnection conditions around farmers.
Third, when formulating policies, policy provisions should be precisely adjusted according to the characteristics of different groups, with special attention being paid to strengthening the popularization and promotion of the internet among the elderly and low-income groups. During the survey, some older and low-income groups could not enjoy the advantages of the internet for economic or other reasons. It is necessary to pay more attention to the inclination of these groups in policy propaganda and promotion so that they can enjoy the benefits of the internet more.