Mullahy J, Portney P R
Trinity College, Hartford, CT 06106.
J Health Econ. 1990 Sep;9(2):193-205. doi: 10.1016/0167-6296(90)90017-w.
Previous studies of the determinants of respiratory health have treated both smoking and air pollution as being exogenous. Using an instrumental variables approach, we estimate a simple production technology in which smoking is treated as being endogenously determined. Doing so, we find, increases the predicted absolute effects of smoking on respiratory health; relative to air pollution, smoking becomes a more important determinant when it is treated as an endogenous variable.