Blame the Foreigners? Exports and Sulfur Dioxide Emissions in China
Zheng Wang ()
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Zheng Wang: De Montfort University
Environmental & Resource Economics, 2021, vol. 80, issue 2, No 5, 279-309
Abstract:
Abstract This paper provides an overhaul of the contribution of exports to industrial sulfur dioxide ( $${\hbox {SO}}_2$$ SO 2 ) emissions in Chinese cities. My estimation strategy exploits the import demand shocks of export destination markets (net of their demand for Chinese products) as a plausibly exogenous source of variation in the cities’ exports. The baseline results show that a 10%-point increase in export shock (weighted by the exporting industry’s relative emission intensity) leads to a 1.6%-point rise in $${\hbox {SO}}_2$$ SO 2 emissions, equivalent to a 635-ton increase per year for an average Chinese city. This estimate remains qualitatively stable to an array of robustness checks by accounting for: alternative controls for production for domestic sales shocks, the city market share in global trade, and the influence of a lagged impact of foreign demand shocks. Tentative evidence also suggests that production for exports does not contribute to nationwide emission intensity drop. A further anatomy shows with weak evidence that foreign-owned firms and deeper contractual links with the global production network could play a positive role in reducing the environmental footprint of industrial activities.
Keywords: Trade; Pollution; Environmental regulation; China; F18; F64; Q53; Q56 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)
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DOI: 10.1007/s10640-021-00586-6
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