Geographic and Socioeconomic Heterogeneity in the Benefits of Reducing Air Pollution in the United States
- 1 January 2021
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy
- Vol. 2, 157-189
- https://doi.org/10.1086/711309
Abstract
Executive SummaryPolicies aimed at reducing the harmful effects of air pollution exposure typically focus on areas with high levels of pollution. However, if a population’s vulnerability to air pol...Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transboundary health impacts of transported global air pollution and international tradeNature, 2017
- Caution, Drivers! Children Present: Traffic, Pollution, and Infant HealthThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 2016
- It's an ill wind: The effect of fine particulate air pollution on respiratory hospitalizationsCanadian Journal of Economics/Revue canadienne d'économique, 2015
- Airports, Air Pollution, and Contemporaneous HealthThe Review of Economic Studies, 2015
- Particulate Matter MattersScience, 2014
- Composition and sources of fine particulate matter across urban and rural sites in the Midwestern United StatesEnvironmental Science: Processes & Impacts, 2014
- Nonlinear temperature effects indicate severe damages to U.S. crop yields under climate changeProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2009
- Health Effects of Fine Particulate Air Pollution: Lines that ConnectJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 2006
- The Impact of Air Pollution on Infant Mortality: Evidence from Geographic Variation in Pollution Shocks Induced by a RecessionThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2003
- Fine Particulate Air Pollution and Mortality in 20 U.S. Cities, 1987–1994The New England Journal of Medicine, 2000