Gupta Aashish, Spears Dean
Population Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania.
Economics Department, University of Texas at Austin, 2225 Speedway, Austin, TX 78712 and Economics and Planning Unit, Indian Statistical Institute - Delhi Centre.
J Environ Econ Manage. 2017 Nov;86:262-276. doi: 10.1016/j.jeem.2017.04.007.
Coal power generation is expanding rapidly in India and other developing countries. In addition to consequences for climate change, present-day health externalities may also substantially increase the social cost of coal. Health consequences of air pollution have proven important in studies of developed countries, but, despite clear importance, similarly well-identified estimates are less available for developing countries, and no estimates exist for the important case of coal in India. We exploit panel data on Indian households, matched to local changes in exposure to coal plants. Increased exposure to coal plants is associated with worse respiratory health. Consistent with a causal mechanism, the effect is specific: no effect is seen on diarrhea or fever, and no effect on respiratory health is seen of new non-coal plants. Our result is not due to endogenous avoidance behavior, or to differential trends in determinants of respiratory health, either before the period studied or simultaneously.
煤炭发电在印度和其他发展中国家正迅速扩张。除了对气候变化产生影响外,当前的健康外部性也可能大幅增加煤炭的社会成本。空气污染对健康的影响在发达国家的研究中已被证明是重要的,但是,尽管其重要性显而易见,但针对发展中国家的类似明确的估计却较少,而且对于印度煤炭这一重要情况尚无估计。我们利用印度家庭的面板数据,并将其与接触煤电厂的当地变化情况相匹配。接触煤电厂增加与呼吸道健康状况变差有关。与因果机制一致,这种影响是特定的:对腹泻或发烧没有影响,新的非煤电厂对呼吸道健康也没有影响。我们的结果并非由于内生性回避行为,也不是由于在所研究时期之前或同时呼吸道健康决定因素的差异趋势所致。