International Business School, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA 02453, USA.
Department of Economics, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA 02453, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Dec 6;18(23):12859. doi: 10.3390/ijerph182312859.
A growing body of literature has documented the negative impacts of air pollution on labor productivity, especially the effects of fine particulate matter. In this paper, we build on this literature by dissecting two channels of how particulate matter affects labor productivity: decreasing labor supply through damaging the physical functioning of the human body, and decreasing the marginal productivity of labor through damaging the cognitive functioning of the human brain. Using the household panel survey from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS) spanning 2000 to 2015 and combining that information with remotely sensed data on exposure to particulate matter (PM2.5), namely, the most harmful air pollution, we find a significantly negative effect of PM2.5 (instrumented by thermal inversion) on labor productivity. We also find that workers who are male, without a college degree, and are employed in outdoor occupations are mainly affected by PM2.5 through decreasing working hours, whereas college-educated workers employed in indoor occupations are mainly affected by PM2.5 through decreasing unit wages. We provide suggestive evidence that health impacts are behind our measured labor-productivity losses as we find significantly lower metrics in physical activity and increasing disease prevalence under higher exposure to PM2.5.
越来越多的文献记录了空气污染对劳动生产率的负面影响,特别是细颗粒物的影响。在本文中,我们通过剖析颗粒物影响劳动生产率的两个渠道来扩展这一文献:通过损害人体的生理功能来减少劳动力供给,以及通过损害人脑的认知功能来降低劳动边际生产力。我们利用中国健康与营养调查(CHNS)2000 年至 2015 年的家庭面板调查,并将这些信息与关于细颗粒物(PM2.5)暴露的遥感数据结合起来,即最有害的空气污染,发现 PM2.5(通过热逆温来衡量)对劳动生产率有显著的负面影响。我们还发现,男性、没有大学学历、从事户外职业的工人主要受到 PM2.5 的影响,表现为工作时间减少,而从事室内职业、受过大学教育的工人主要受到 PM2.5 的影响,表现为单位工资减少。我们提供了一些有启发性的证据,表明我们测量的劳动生产率损失背后是健康影响,因为我们发现,在更高的 PM2.5 暴露下,体力活动的指标明显较低,疾病发病率也在上升。