The Changing Nature of Pollution, Income, and Environmental Inequality in the United States
Jonathan Colmer (),
Suvy Qin,
John Voorheis and
Reed Walker
Working Papers from U.S. Census Bureau, Center for Economic Studies
Abstract:
This paper uses administrative tax records linked to Census demographic data and high-resolution measures of fine small particulate (PM2.5) exposure to study the evolution of the Black-White pollution exposure gap over the past 40 years. In doing so, we focus on the various ways in which income may have contributed to these changes using a statistical decomposition. We decompose the overall change in the Black-White PM2.5 exposure gap into (1) components that stem from rank-preserving compression in the overall pollution distribution and (2) changes that stem from a reordering of Black and White households within the pollution distribution. We find a significant narrowing of the Black-White PM2.5 exposure gap over this time period that is overwhelmingly driven by rank-preserving changes rather than positional changes. However, the relative positions of Black and White households at the upper end of the pollution distribution have meaningfully shifted in the most recent years.
Pages: 13 pages
Date: 2024-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene, nep-env, nep-his and nep-ure
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)
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https://www2.census.gov/library/working-papers/2024/adrm/ces/CES-WP-24-04.pdf First version, 2024 (application/pdf)
Related works:
Journal Article: The Changing Nature of Pollution, Income, and Environmental Inequality in the United States (2024) 
Working Paper: The changing nature of pollution, income and environmental inequality in the United States (2024) 
Working Paper: The Changing Nature of Pollution, Income, and Environmental Inequality in the United States (2024) 
Working Paper: The Changing Nature of Pollution, Income, and Environmental Inequality in the United States (2024) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cen:wpaper:24-04
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