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Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UCB
University of California, Berkeley

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Measuring the Effects of Environmental Regulations: The Critical Importance of a Spatially Disaggregated Analysis
Maximilian Auffhammer, University of California, Berkeley
Antonio M. Bento, Cornell University
Scott E. Lowe, Boise State University

Download the Paper (402 K, PDF file) - August 29, 2007 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:
We examine the effects of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments (CAAA) on ambient concentrations of PM10 in the United States between 1990 and 2005. Consistent with prior literature, we find that non-attainment designation has no effect on the average monitor in non-attainment counties, after controlling for weather, socioeconomic characteristics at the county level and lagged concentrations. In sharp contrast, if we allow for heterogeneous treatment by type of monitor and county, we do find that the 1990 CAAA produced substantial effects. Our estimation results suggest that non-attainment counties with single monitors experienced a drop in concentrations of 10.5% relative to attainment counties. In non-attainment counties with multiple monitors, the overall effect of the regulation is an increase of ambient PM10 concentrations by 1.9%. The dirtiest monitors in these counties, however, experienced drops in PM10 of 6.1%, which suggest that regulators focus their attention on the dirtiest monitors.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Maximilian Auffhammer, Antonio M. Bento, and Scott E. Lowe, "Measuring the Effects of Environmental Regulations: The Critical Importance of a Spatially Disaggregated Analysis" (August 29, 2007). Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UCB. CUDARE Working Paper 1047.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/are_ucb/1047

 
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