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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Environmental Protection Agency'

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Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 28

Center for Economic Studies - 27

Census of Manufactures - 23

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 23

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 19

North American Industry Classification System - 18

Longitudinal Research Database - 17

Standard Industrial Classification - 16

National Science Foundation - 15

Ordinary Least Squares - 15

Toxics Release Inventory - 14

National Bureau of Economic Research - 14

Longitudinal Business Database - 13

Energy Information Administration - 13

Total Factor Productivity - 12

Special Sworn Status - 12

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 12

American Community Survey - 11

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 11

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 11

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 11

PAOC - 11

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 9

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 9

Department of Energy - 9

Internal Revenue Service - 8

Cobb-Douglas - 8

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 8

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 7

North American Free Trade Agreement - 7

General Accounting Office - 6

University of Chicago - 6

Disclosure Review Board - 6

CAAA - 6

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 6

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 6

Supreme Court - 5

Decennial Census - 5

Protected Identification Key - 5

UC Berkeley - 5

Economic Census - 5

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 5

Journal of Economic Literature - 5

Research Data Center - 5

Code of Federal Regulations - 5

Boston Research Data Center - 5

Department of Economics - 4

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 4

National Center for Health Statistics - 4

State Energy Data System - 4

Federal Register - 4

American Economic Association - 4

New York Times - 4

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 4

Schools Under Registration Review - 4

Small Business Administration - 3

Department of Health and Human Services - 3

W-2 - 3

Columbia University - 3

National Research Council - 3

American Housing Survey - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Social Security Administration - 3

United States Census Bureau - 3

Establishment Micro Properties - 3

Geographic Information Systems - 3

Current Population Survey - 3

Social Security Number - 3

County Business Patterns - 3

Service Annual Survey - 3

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 3

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 3

emission - 44

pollution - 44

epa - 40

environmental - 40

pollutant - 34

regulation - 30

expenditure - 29

polluting - 29

econometric - 26

regulatory - 24

production - 18

consumption - 16

manufacturing - 15

efficiency - 15

environmental regulation - 15

produce - 14

cost - 14

pollution abatement - 14

industrial - 12

demand - 12

concentration - 11

estimating - 11

costs pollution - 11

refinery - 11

abatement expenditures - 11

economist - 10

manufacturer - 10

polluting industries - 10

market - 9

impact - 9

economically - 8

pollution exposure - 8

estimates pollution - 8

fuel - 8

depreciation - 8

regulation productivity - 8

environmental expenditures - 8

chemical - 7

pollution regulation - 7

spending - 7

regulated - 7

expense - 7

exposure - 6

macroeconomic - 6

plant productivity - 6

electricity - 6

energy - 6

renewable - 6

housing - 6

socioeconomic - 5

population - 5

company - 5

estimation - 5

gdp - 5

utility - 5

recession - 5

productive - 5

export - 5

spillover - 5

disadvantaged - 4

tax - 4

energy prices - 4

electricity prices - 4

mortality - 4

sector - 4

endogeneity - 4

generation - 4

efficient - 4

development - 4

subsidy - 4

revenue - 4

residential - 4

house - 4

homeowner - 4

accounting - 4

rent - 4

state - 4

plant - 4

area - 3

disparity - 3

industry concentration - 3

pricing - 3

energy efficiency - 3

econometrically - 3

regression - 3

rate - 3

health - 3

heterogeneity - 3

productivity plants - 3

estimator - 3

growth - 3

enterprise - 3

survey - 3

consumer - 3

econometrician - 3

corporation - 3

tariff - 3

factory - 3

payroll - 3

labor - 3

unobserved - 3

industries estimate - 3

neighborhood - 3

home - 3

amenity - 3

renter - 3

metropolitan - 3

budget - 3

compliance - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 64


  • Working Paper

    The Green Industry: An Examination of Environmental Products Manufacturing

    September 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-34

    The "green industry" is often noted in discussions of the costs and benefits of environmental policy, and it has been characterized as a unique industry with substantial potential for employment growth, well-paying jobs, and export opportunities. In this paper, we examine the characteristics and recent economic performance of the green industry, using establishment-level data on environmental products manufacturers (EPMs) from the 1995 Survey of Environmental Products and Services, together with data from the Annual Survey of Manufactures and various Census of Manufactures. Results suggest that there are some differences between EPMs and their non-EPM counterparts in the same industry, in terms of employment, employee compensation, exports, and productivity. However, we do not find any evidence that EPMs performed any better than otherwise similar plants, in terms of survival, employment growth, wage growth, and export growth. Our findings offer a more complex and nuanced portrayal of the green industry than is typical, and we suggest that this industry may not be as exceptional as is sometimes maintained.
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  • Working Paper

    The Effect of Power Plants on Local Housing Values and Rents: Evidence from Restricted Census Microdata

    July 2008

    Authors: Lucas Davis

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-19

    Current trends in electricity consumption imply that hundreds of new fossil-fuel power plants will be built in the United States over the next several decades. Power plant siting has become increasingly contentious, in part because power plants are a source of numerous negative local externalities including elevated levels of air pollution, haze, noise and traffic. Policymakers attempt to take these local disamenities into account when siting facilities, but little reliable evidence is available about their quantitative importance. This paper examines neighborhoods in the United States where power plants were opened during the 1990s using household-level data from a restricted version of the U.S. decennial census. Compared to neighborhoods farther away, housing values and rents decreased by 3-5% between 1990 and 2000 in neighborhoods near sites. Estimates of household marginal willingness-to-pay to avoid power plants are reported separately for natural gas and other types of plants, large plants and small plants, base load plants and peaker plants, and upwind and downwind households.
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  • Working Paper

    You Can Take it With You: Proposition 13 Tax Benefits, Residential Mobility, and Willingness to Pay for Housing Amenities

    June 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-15

    The endogeneity of prices has long been recognized as the main identification problem in the estimation of marginal willingness to pay (MWTP) for the characteristics of a given product. This issue is particularly important when estimating MWTP in the housing market, since a number of housing and neighborhood features are unobserved by the econometrician. This paper proposes the use of a well defined type of transaction costs ' moving costs generated by property tax laws - to deal with this type of omitted variable bias. California's Proposition 13 property tax law is the source of variation in transaction costs used in the empirical analysis. Beyond its fiscal consequences, Proposition 13 created a lock-in effect on housing choice because of the implicit tax break enjoyed by homeowners living in the same house for a long time. First, I provide estimates of this lock-in effect using a natural experiment created by two subsequent amendments to Proposition 13 - Propositions 60 and 90. These amendments allow households headed by an individual over the age of 55 to transfer the implicit tax benefit to a new home. I show that mobility rates of 55-year old homeowners are approximately 25% higher than those of 54 year olds. Second, all these features of the tax law are then incorporated into a household sorting model. The key insight of this model is that because of the property tax law, different potential buyers have different user costs for the same house. The exogenous property tax component of this user cost then works as an instrument for prices. I find that MWTP estimates for housing characteristics are approximately 100% upward biased when the model does not account for the price endogeneity.
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  • Working Paper

    Issues and Challenges in Measuring Environmental Expenditures by U.S. Manufacturing: The Redevelopment of the PACE Survey

    July 2007

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-20

    The Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures (PACE) survey is the most comprehensive source of information on U.S. manufacturing's capital expenditures and operating costs associated with pollution abatement. In 2003, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency began a significant initiative to redevelop the survey, guided by the advice of a multi-disciplinary workgroup consisting of economists, engineers, survey design experts, and experienced data users, in addition to incorporating feedback from key manufacturing industries. This paper describes some of these redevelopment efforts. Issues discussed include the approach to developing the new survey instrument, methods used to evaluate (and improve) its performance, innovations in sampling, and the special development and role of outside expertise. The completely redesigned PACE survey was first administered in early 2006.
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  • Working Paper

    Estimating the Distribution of Plant-Level Manufacturing Energy Efficiency with Stochastic Frontier Regression

    March 2007

    Authors: Gale Boyd

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-07

    A feature commonly used to distinguish between parametric/statistical models and engineering models is that engineering models explicitly represent best practice technologies while the parametric/statistical models are typically based on average practice. Measures of energy intensity based on average practice are less useful in the corporate management of energy or for public policy goal setting. In the context of company or plant level energy management, it is more useful to have a measure of energy intensity capable of representing where a company or plant lies within a distribution of performance. In other words, is the performance close (or far) from the industry best practice? This paper presents a parametric/statistical approach that can be used to measure best practice, thereby providing a measure of the difference, or 'efficiency gap' at a plant, company or overall industry level. The approach requires plant level data and applies a stochastic frontier regression analysis to energy use. Stochastic frontier regression analysis separates the energy intensity into three components, systematic effects, inefficiency, and statistical (random) error. The stochastic frontier can be viewed as a sub-vector input distance function. One advantage of this approach is that physical product mix can be included in the distance function, avoiding the problem of aggregating output to define a single energy/output ratio to measure energy intensity. The paper outlines the methods and gives an example of the analysis conducted for a non-public micro-dataset of wet corn refining plants.
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  • Working Paper

    Assessing Multi-Dimensional Performance: Environmental and Economic Outcomes

    May 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-03

    This study examines the determinants of environmental and economic performance for plants in three traditional smoke-stack industries: pulp and paper, oil, and steel. We combine data from Census Bureau and EPA databases and Compustat on the economic performance, regulatory activity and environmental performance on air and water pollution emissions and toxic releases. We find that plants with higher labor productivity tend to have lower emissions. Regulatory enforcement actions (but not inspections) are associated with lower emissions, and state-level political support for environmental issues is associated with lower water pollution and toxic releases. There is little evidence that plants owned by larger firms perform better, nor do older plants perform worse.
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  • Working Paper

    A Change of PACE: Comparing the 1994 and 1999 Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures Surveys

    July 2004

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-09

    Since 1973, the Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures (PACE) survey has been the principle source of information on U.S. industries' capital expenditure and operating costs associated with pollution abatement efforts. The PACE survey was discontinued after 1994 and then revived in 1999 for one year ' in a substantially different form than the preceding surveys however, making longitudinal analysis quite difficult. Conceptual differences include matters as fundamental as the scope and meaning of pollution abatement as well as the definition of operating costs. A number of other critical changes also exist, including ones of industrial coverage and sample selection. This paper is the first comprehensive effort to document the many changes in the PACE survey across these years and to provide a detailed guide for researchers and policymakers who wish to compare the 1994 and 1999 data. Overall, we find a 27% decline in environmental spending by the manufacturing sector between these two years, though there appears to be significant heterogeneity across industries. We discuss potential reasons for this dramatic decline, focusing mainly on issues of survey methodology and design. This paper should help inform current efforts to redevelop the PACE survey and re-establish it as a regular, annual survey.
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  • Working Paper

    Pollution Abatement Expenditure by U.S. Manufacturing Plants: Do Community Characteristics Matter?

    November 2003

    Authors: Randy Becker

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-03-18

    A number of previous studies have demonstrated the impact of community characteristics on environmental outcomes such as local pollution levels and the siting of noxious facilities. If certain groups are indeed exposed to higher levels of air pollution, it may be due to a greater concentration of air polluters in those communities and/or facilities in those areas investing less in air pollution abatement. This paper examines the latter, using establishment-level data on manufacturing plants from the U.S. Census Bureau'''s Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures (PACE) survey. The empirical formulation herein allows plant-level air pollution abatement operating costs to depend on an array of community characteristics common to this literature. After controlling for establishment characteristics and federal, state, and local regulation, some of these local factors are found to have had an additional effect on air pollution abatement expenditures. In particular, populations with higher homeownership rates and higher per capita income enjoyed greater pollution abatement activity from their nearby plants. Meanwhile, establishments in communities where manufacturing accounted for a greater share of local employment had less pollution abatement spending, suggesting a local constituency that is more resistant to additional regulation. Political ideology is also found to play a role, with plants in areas with larger concentrations of Democrats having more expenditure on air pollution abatement, all else being equal. There is little evidence that race and ethnicity matter when it comes to the pollution abatement behavior of the most pollution-intensive facilities. The findings of this paper support those of a number of recent studies.
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  • Working Paper

    Pollution Abatement Expenditures and Plant-Level Productivity: A Production Function Approach

    August 2003

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-03-16

    In this paper, we investigate the impact of environmental regulation on productivity using a Cobb-Douglas production function framework. Estimating the effects of regulation on productivity can be done with a top-down approach using data for broad sectors of the economy, or a more disaggregated bottom-up approach. Our study follows a bottom-up approach using data from the U.S. paper, steel, and oil industries. We measure environmental regulation using plant-level information on pollution abatement expenditures, which allows us to distinguish between productive and abatement expenditures on each input. We use annual Census Bureau information (1979-1990) on output, labor, capital, and material inputs, and pollution abatement operating costs and capital expenditures for 68 pulp and paper mills, 55 oil refineries, and 27 steel mills. We find that pollution abatement inputs generally contribute little or nothing to output, especially when compared to their '''productive''' equivalents. Adding an aggregate pollution abatement cost measure to a Cobb-Douglas production function, we find that a $1 increase in pollution abatement costs leads to an estimated productivity decline of $3.11, $1.80, and $5.98 in the paper, oil, and steel industries respectively. These findings imply substantial differences across industries in their sensitivity to pollution abatement costs, arguing for a bottom-up approach that can capture these differences. Further differentiating plants by their production technology, we find substantial differences in the impact of pollution abatement costs even within industries, with higher marginal costs at plants with more polluting technologies. Finally, in all three industries, plants concentrating on change-in-production-process abatement techniques have higher productivity than plants doing predominantly end-of-line abatement, but also seem to be more affected by pollution abatement operating costs. Overall, our results point to the importance using detailed, disaggregated analyses, even below the industry level, when trying to model the costs of forcing plants to reduce their emissions.
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  • Working Paper

    What Determines Environmental Performance at Paper Mills? The Roles of Abatement Spending, Regulation, and Efficiency

    April 2003

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-03-10

    This paper examines the determinants of environmental performance at paper mills, measured by air pollution emissions per unit of output. We consider differences across plants in air pollution abatement expenditures, local regulatory stringency, and productive efficiency. Emissions are significantly lower in plants with a larger air pollution abatement capital stock: a 10 percent increase in abatement capital stock appears to reduce emissions by 6.9 percent. This translates into a sizable social return: one dollar of abatement capital stock is estimated to provide and annual return of about 75 cents in pollution reduction benefits. Local regulatory stringency and productive efficiency also matter: plants in non-attainment counties have 43 percent lower emissions and plants with 10 percent higher productivity have 2.5 percent lower emissions. For pollution abatement operating costs we find (puzzlingly) positive, but always insignificant, coefficients.
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