Decentralization and pollution spillovers: Evidence from the re-drawing of county borders in Brazil
© The Author 2016. Decentralization can improve service delivery, but it can also generate externalities across jurisdictional boundaries. We examine the nature and size of water pollution externalities as rivers flow across jurisdictions. Panel data on water pollution in Brazilian rivers coupled with county splits that change the locations of borders allow us to identify the spatial patterns of pollution as rivers approach and cross borders, controlling for fixed effects and trends specific to each location. The theory of externalities predicts that pollution should increase at an increasing rate as the river approaches the downstream exit border, that there should be a structural break in the slope of the pollution function at the border, and that a larger number of managing jurisdictions should exacerbate pollution externalities. We find support for all four predictions in the data. Satellite data on growth in night-time lights along rivers show that local authorities allow more settlements to develop close to rivers in the downstream portions of counties, which is the likely underlying mechanism. The border effects on pollution are not as pronounced when the cost of inter-jurisdictional coordination is lower.
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Oxford, Eng.Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal articleJournal
Review of Economic StudiesVolume
84Pagination
464-502ISSN
0034-6527eISSN
1467-937XIssue
1Publisher
Oxford AcademicUsage metrics
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