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"Getting consumers to change their habits is difficult under any economic conditions," said Joel Makower, a consultant and executive editor of Greener World Media Inc. "Stubbornness is recession-proof." Some governments have decided that sticks work better than carrots. San Francisco in 2007 banned plastic bags and was followed by more than dozen other cities and counties. Washington, D.C., last year began taxing shoppers 5 cents per disposable bag. Disposable bag use fell by 80 percent in some stores, officials say. Several states are considering bans or fees on disposable bags. Countries from Ireland to China have also restricted plastic bag use. Some people see paper bags as preferable because they are renewable and biodegradable, but their use takes its own environmental tolls. Retailers are wary of paper-bag domination because of higher costs, about three times more than plastic. Still, some miss the small but noticeable incentive. Andrea Deckard of Monroe, Ohio, says Kroger's rebates saved her about 20 cents a visit. "I don't know what it would have hurt to continue it," said Deckard, who shares bill-cutting tips on her blog "The Savings Lifestyle." "It was just like a coupon to a lot of people."
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