• Young’s Theorem: – For some function F(x1,x2,x3,...,xn) with cross partial
derivatives Fji and Fij that exist and are continuous, Fij=Fji F
• Roy’s Identity– if V(p1,p2,I) is an indirect utility function then the
Marshallian demand for good i is Xi(p1,p2,I)=-VPi/VI
Is Trade Good or Bad for the Environment?
Sorting Out the Causality
Jeffrey Frankel and Andrew RoseReview of Economics and Statistics 2005
+NBER Working Paper 9201 (2002)
Theoretical Precedents• Environmental Kuznets Curve literature
– Inverted-u shaped relationship between pollution and income• Pollution Haven Hypothesis
– strict regs in rich countries shift polluting industry to poor countries• Factor Endowments Hypothesis
– relatively capital-rich countries export pollution intensive goods• Porter Hypothesis
– strict environmental regulation promotes trade*
Digression: Porter Hypothesis
Claim: regulation can raise profitability and promote exports
Possible Explanations1. There are positive spillovers in innovation.2. There’s a free lunch out there waiting to be
claimed.3. There are frictions in the system. 4. California effect
Theoretical Precedents• Environmental Kuznets Curve literature
– Inverted-u shaped relationship between pollution and income• Pollution Haven Hypothesis
– strict regs in rich countries shift polluting industry to poor countries• Factor Endowments Hypothesis
– relatively capital-rich countries export pollution intensive goods• Porter Hypothesis
– strict environmental regulation promotes trade*• Politics and Environment
– democracy promotes efficient regulation, openness, and income growth)
– as F&R write: “ what if free-market trade policies are no more important to growth than free-market domestic policies, but tend to be correlated with them? (p.11)
Conclusion
• Income, openness, emissions are all endogenous
This paper’s goal
• Determine whether trade and income growth have positive or negative impact on environmental indicators controlling for endogeneity of each.
Equation to be estimated
iiii
iii
epopLandAreaPolityYMX
popypopyEnvDam
,904,903,90
2,902,9010
/ln/
]/[ln/ln
• EnvDam - one of seven different measures of environmental damage,• ln(y/pop) – log of 1990 real GDP per capita,•[X+M]/Y – ratio of nominal X and M to GDP (openness)• polity – how democratic is the structure of the government• LandArea/pop – per capita land area• e – residual representing other causes
Data
• Dependent variables: cross country data for 1990 for 7 different environmental indicators:– Concentrations in micrograms per cubic meter (averaged
across a country’s measuring stations and cities) of SO2, PM, NO2;
– industrial CO2 emissions per capita (in metric tons), – average annual percentage change in deforestation for
1990-1995, – energy depletion (=unit resource rents x physical
quantities of fossil fuel energy extracted), – % of rural population with access to clean water 1990-
1996.
Independent Variables
• Direct measures: – [X+M]/Y
• ratio of nominal exports + imports]/GDP– natural log of 1990 per capital GDP
• real PPP-adjusted– Polity IV Project indicators of
autocratic/democratic nature of gov’t• ranges from -10 to +10 with -10=strongly autocratic,
+10=strongly democratic– ln(land area per capita)
Indirect Measures—Trade Intensity
• fitted [X+M]/Y where fitted[X+M] are predicted by a Gravity Model.
• Gravity models regress actual pairwise trade on – log of distance, – log of partner country population, – log of area, – and dummy variables for common language,
common land border, and landlocked status.
Source: Frankel and Romer, 1999, “Does Trade Cause Growth” AER p.384.
– “After estimating the gravity model for a large data set on pairwise trade, we aggregate the exponent of the fitted values across bilateral trading partners to arrive at a prediction of total trade for a given country. The correlation between actual trade shares and [the] generated instrument is .72.”
(From their working paper:)
iiiiii
iiii
uSchoolSchoolnYIpopY
ZpopYMXpopY
21//ln
ln//ln
4321,70
1,900,90
Initial per capita income
Initial per capita income
InvestmentInvestment Estimates of human capital investment based on
primary and secondary schooling enrollment rates
Estimates of human capital investment based on
primary and secondary schooling enrollment rates
Growth rate of population
Growth rate of population
Indirect Measures—Income
“other controls”
Source: Frankel & Rose 2002 NBER working paper
Results for NO2, SO2, PM
Results for NO2, SO2, PM
• standard errors are largest for PM (not stat sig),• then NO2 (moderately stat sig), • then SO2 (strongly stat sig).
Results for NO2, SO2, PM
• Openness has neg impact on each type of emissions.
Results for NO2, SO2, PM
•Polity: improved governance has a beneficial effect.
Results for NO2, SO2, PM
• Just in terms of signs, EKC does seem to be present; but, again, isn’t stat sig for PM, and only moderately so for NO2.
Results for NO2, SO2, PM
• IV results: similar to OLS results, with diminished significance levels in some cases.
3A. Results for other environmental measures
• OLSBeneficial effect of energy depletion and water accessCO2: free-rider problem, global externality
• IVDetrimental effect of openness on CO2 loses significanceBeneficial effect of energy depletion becomes significant at 10% level
To summarize
• The use of IV to correct for simultaneity can make an important difference to some results.
• Some evidence that openness reduces air pollution;• Little evidence that openness causes significant
environmental degradation;• Exception: carbon dioxide;• Supportive of the EKC hypothesis;• Positive effect of democracy on environmental
quality.
Extensions: Do some countries have a “comparative advantage” in pollution?
Version 1---Income
• High income open countries farm out their polluting production to low income open countries.
• Test: – include interaction term:
Openness x Income. – If the Income version of PHH holds, this interaction
should have a negative fitted coefficient. • Sample Results: (SO2 from Table 6, NBER
Working Paper)
Note: sign on interaction term is positive for both IV and OLS!
Similarly, they find pos. interaction term for PM, and don’t get stat sig results on interaction terms for the other environmental indicators.
• Version 2: Countries endowed with a large supply of environmental quality become pollution havens, exporting dirty goods to more densely populated countries.
• Test by adding Openness × Land Area/Capita
• Result: coefficients are of mixed signs and are insignificant
---no evidence supporting the “land area” version of pollution haven hypothesis.
• Version 3 (Factor Endowments Hypothesis): trade may lead to an increase in pollution among the capital-endowed countries and a decrease among the labor-endowed countries.
• Test by adding (openness × capital/labor)• Result: coefficients are of mixed signs and are
insignificant
Their conclusions
• “There is no evidence that poor, land-abundant, or capital-abundant countries use trade to exploit a “comparative advantage” in pollution.”
4. Conclusions• This paper models the effect of trade on the
environment, controlling for income and other relevant factors.
• Contribution: address the endogeneity of income and especially trade (IV drawn from the gravity model)
• Summary of the results:• Trade appears to have a beneficial effect on some measures
of env. quality;• Little evidence that trade has a detrimental effect overall;• Reject the hypothesis of an international race to the bottom
driven by trade;• No evidence for the pollution haven hypothesis;• Trade has an indirect effect on the environment through
EKC.• The major example where trade and growth may have the
detrimental effects feared by environmentalists is CO2.
Caveats
• Cross-country vs. panel data– Unobserved heterogeneity
• Number of observations is small– As low as 35 for NO2 in IV estimation.
• Test of PHE vs FEH?– Income and K/L work in opposite direction, and are
correlated• If interact only one at a time with openness, may well find
statistically insignificant results even if both (PHE and FEH) are acting simultaneously.