AgEcon Search

AgEcon Search >
       University of Minnesota >
          Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy >
             Working Papers >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://purl.umn.edu/14423

Title: TRANSBOUNDARY POLLUTION AND THE KUZNET'S CURVE IN THE GLOBAL COMMONS
Authors: Hauer, Grant
Runge, C. Ford
Authors (Email): Runge, C. Ford (frunge@umn.edu)
Issue Date: 2000
Series/Report no.: Working Paper WP00-4
Abstract: Recent empirical work suggests an inverted U-shaped relationship between pollution and national income (the environmental Kuznet's curve). This work has typically ignored the fact that pollutants are dispersed to varying degrees. This study shows how varying levels of spatial pollution dispersion (or "publicness") can affect pollution-income relationships. A public goods model captures the idea of the "global commons" with two pollutants. The model suggests that no refutable hypotheses are possible without restrictions on income and substitution effects. With such restrictions, emission levels are lower for countries that have high pollution spillovers and larger proportions of pollution emitted within their borders. The model motivates the use of a switching regression approach to estimate the relationship between pollution emissions and national income for a set of countries. The empirical analysis incorporates two key pollution dispersion variables: transboundary pollution spillovers and the portion of pollution remaining in the country of origin. The pollution dispersion variables have a detectable effect on national pollution emissions although not necessarily those that them model predicts.
URI: http://purl.umn.edu/14423
Institution/Association: University of Minnesota>Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy>Working Papers
Total Pages: 36
Language: English
Collections:Working Papers

Files in This Item:

File SizeFormat
wp00-04.pdf318KbPDFView/Open
Recommend this item

All items in AgEcon Search are protected by copyright.

 

 

Brought to you by the University of Minnesota Department of Applied Economics and the University of Minnesota Libraries with cooperation from the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association.

All papers are in Acrobat (.pdf) format. Get Adobe Reader

Contact Us

Powered by: