Is Trade Good or Bad for the Environment? Sorting Out the Causality
Jeffrey Frankel and
Andrew Rose
No 9201, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
What is the effect of trade on a country's environment, for a given level of GDP? Some have observed an apparent positive correlation between openness to trade and measures of environmental quality. But this could be due to endogeneity of trade, rather than causality. This paper uses exogenous determinants of trade geographical variables from the gravity model as instruments to isolate the effect of openness. The finding is that trade may indeed have a beneficial effect on three measures of air pollution. Statistical significance is lacking for Particulate Matter, but is moderate for NO2, and high for SO2. Results for broader environmental measures are not as encouraging, but one can at least say that there is little evidence that trade has the detrimental effect on the environment that the race-to-the-bottom theory would lead one to expect. The larger effect appears to come via income itself: our results generally support the environmental Kuznets curve, which says that growth harms the environment at low levels of income and helps at high levels, and to support the proposition that openness to trade accelerates the growth process.
JEL-codes: F1 Q2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2002-09
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-res
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Published as Jeffrey A. Frankel & Andrew K. Rose, 2005. "Is Trade Good or Bad for the Environment? Sorting Out the Causality," The Review of Economics and Statistics, MIT Press, vol. 87(1), pages 85-91, October.
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Journal Article: Is Trade Good or Bad for the Environment? Sorting Out the Causality (2005) 
Working Paper: Is Trade Good or Bad for the Environment? Sorting Out the Causality (2003) 
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