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Unwatched Pollution: The Effect of Intermittent Monitoring on Air Quality
Intermittent monitoring of environmental standards may induce strategic changes in polluting activities. This paper documents local strategic responses to a cyclical, once-every-six-day air quality monitoring schedule under the federal Clean Air Act. Using satellite data of monitored areas, I show t...
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Published in: | The American economic review 2021-07, Vol.111 (7), p.2101-2126 |
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container_title | The American economic review |
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creator | Zou, Eric Yongchen |
description | Intermittent monitoring of environmental standards may induce strategic changes in polluting activities. This paper documents local strategic responses to a cyclical, once-every-six-day air quality monitoring schedule under the federal Clean Air Act. Using satellite data of monitored areas, I show that air quality is significantly worse on unmonitored days. This effect is explained by short-term suppression of pollution on monitored days, especially during high-pollution periods when the city’s noncompliance risk is high. Cities’ use of air quality warnings increases on monitored days, which suggests local governments’ role in coordinating emission reductions. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1257/aer.20181346 |
format | article |
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source | Business Source Ultimate; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; EconLit with Full Text; American Economic Association Web |
title | Unwatched Pollution: The Effect of Intermittent Monitoring on Air Quality |
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