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The Productivity Consequences of Pollution-Induced Migration in China

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-15, 23:06 authored by Gaurav Khanna, Wenquan Liang, Ahmed MobarakAhmed Mobarak, Ran Song
We quantify how pollution affects aggregate productivity and welfare in spatial equilibrium. We show that skilled workers in China emigrate away from polluted cities. These patterns are evident under various empirical specifications, such as when instrumenting for pollution using upwind power plants, or thermal inversions. Pollution changes the spatial distribution of skilled and unskilled workers, and wage returns by location. We quantify the loss in aggregate productivity due to this re-sorting by estimating a spatial equilibrium model. Counterfactual simulations show that reducing pollution increases productivity through spatial re-sorting by approximately as much as the direct health benefits of clean air. (JEL J24, J31, J61, P25, P28, Q53, R23)

History

Journal

American Economic Journal: Applied Economics

Volume

17

Pagination

184-224

Open access

  • No

ISSN

1945-7782

eISSN

1945-7790

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

American Economic Association