Pollution and Growth: What Do We Know?

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP848

Authors: Gene M. Grossman

Abstract: This paper reviews the empirical evidence on the relationship between economic output and various dimensions of air and water quality. Pollution may rise with growth, because an increased scale of economic activity means more emissions, ceteris paribus. Economic growth may be associated with a change in the composition of economic output, however, or in the techniques that are used in production. In the event, growth may lead to an alleviation of some forms of environmental problems. We find that not all measures of environmental quality have been similarly affected by increases in output. Along some dimensions, conditions have improved monotonically with increases in per capita output and the associated rises in standards of material living. For other pollutants there is an inverted-u shaped relationship with output. Finally, for some types of pollution there is no evidence at all that a turning point has yet been reached. The paper goes on to discuss the economic factors that determine the likely pattern for different types of pollutants and the implications of the findings for environmental policy.

Keywords: pollution; environment; economic development

JEL Codes: 010; 025


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Economic activity increases (O49)pollution levels rise (Q53)
Economic growth (O00)initial increases in pollution (Q53)
Economic growth (O00)shifts towards less polluting industries (F64)
Technological advancements and regulatory measures (O25)reductions in emissions (Q52)
Increased economic prosperity (F69)greater public demand for environmental quality (Q53)

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