Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10226796 Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 2018 54 Pages PDF
Abstract
In recent years, China's environmental regulation efforts have mainly focused on severely polluted “key regions.” The central government has designated the “three rivers and three lakes basins” (3Rs3Ls) as key regions for water pollution control and has imposed a variety of regulations to improve water quality in those basins. This paper evaluates the effects of the water quality regulations on firms' emissions of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and productivity in the 3Rs3Ls basins. We find that although the water quality regulations forced many small, heavily-polluting firms to shut down, they had no statistically significant effects on surviving firms' productivity because they were ineffective in reducing their COD emissions. A policy that forces the surviving firms to reduce their emissions would reduce their output values and productivity, at least in the short run. However, the effect is likely to be small. Specifically, a 10% reduction in total COD emissions from the industrial sectors would require only a 0.1% reduction in output values under the current production technologies. These findings are robust to alternative specifications and sampling strategies.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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