Can Centralization of Environmental Regulations Reduce Firm Emissions? Evidence from County-Prefecture Centralization Reforms in China
Posted: 30 Jul 2022
Date Written: July 23, 2022
Abstract
Drawing on a natural experiment generated by prefecture-level centralization reforms in China in the early 2000s, we study whether a centralized system delivers better environmental outcomes in a developing country context. We examine the impact of centralization reforms on firm air pollution emission using a difference-in-differences estimation strategy. We find that centralization reform reduces firm air pollution intensities in total waste air, SO2, and soot. This effect is robust when we control for contemporaneous environmental policy changes and SOE reforms. We instrument the decision of a prefecture centralization reform using thermal inversion and we run placebo tests to further demonstrate that the causal effect is unlikely a function of a selection effect and omitted variables. Empirical tests on causal mechanisms reveal that pollution reduction is mainly due to increased pollution removals during the end-of-pipe treatment stage while there is little evidence that centralization increases firm scale of production, productivity, efficiency, and innovation efforts. Finally, we test whether a centralization reform drives local firms away (i.e., a spillover effect) and we find no supporting evidence.
Keywords: Centralization; Firm Emissions; China
JEL Classification: Q53 Q56 O1
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