Alberto Salvo , Qu Tang , Jing Yang , Peng Yin , Maigeng Zhou
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
China’s spatially discontinuous winter heating policy has been used to examine how sustained exposure to air pollution impacts health. This influential literature exploits quasi-experimental cross-sectional variation in atmospheric emissions in a geographically vast and populous nation. Our study introduces an alternative external definition of the winter heating boundary and takes advantage of an unprecedented expansion of pollution and mortality surveillance, covering at least 10 times more sites and finer-grained pollution particle sizes that are more relevant to health standards today. We estimate spatial discontinuities in pollution and mortality that shrink over time, consistent with tighter emissions regulations, higher quality medical care, and increased air quality disclosure to – and defensive behavior by – the public. We find that in 2013–2015 a 10-μg/m3 increase in PM2.5 raised behaviorally inclusive mortality for cardiovascular and respiratory causes by 11% (95% confidence interval = 2–20%) and lung cancer mortality by 20% (95% CI = 4–37%).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Environmental Economics and Management publishes theoretical and empirical papers devoted to specific natural resources and environmental issues. For consideration, papers should (1) contain a substantial element embodying the linkage between economic systems and environmental and natural resources systems or (2) be of substantial importance in understanding the management and/or social control of the economy in its relations with the natural environment. Although the general orientation of the journal is toward economics, interdisciplinary papers by researchers in other fields of interest to resource and environmental economists will be welcomed.