Trade, Technology, and the Environment: Why Have Poor Countries Regulated Sooner?

Working Paper: NBER ID: w14286

Authors: Mary Lovely; David Popp

Abstract: Countries who adopted regulation of coal-fired power plants after 1980 generally did so at a much lower level of per-capita income than did early adopters -- poor countries regulated sooner. This phenomenon suggests that pioneering adopters of environmental regulation provide an advantage to countries adopting these regulations later, presumably through advances in technology made by these first adopters. Focusing specifically on regulation of coal-fired power plants, we ask to what extent the availability of new technology influences the adoption of new environmental regulation. We build a general equilibrium model of an open economy to identify the political-economy determinants of the decision to regulate emissions. Using a newly-created data set of SO2 and NOX regulations for coal-fired power plants and a patent-based measure of the technology frontier, we test the model's predictions using a hazard regression of the diffusion of environmental regulation across countries. Our findings support the hypothesis that international economic integration eases access to environmentally friendly technologies and leads to earlier adoption, ceteris paribus, of regulation in developing countries. By limiting firms' ability to burden shift, however, openness may raise opposition to regulation. Our results suggest that domestic trade protection allows costs to be shifted to domestic consumers while large countries can shift costs to foreign consumers, raising the likelihood of adoption. Other political economy factors, such as the quality of domestic coal and election years, are also important determinants.

Keywords: Trade; Technology; Environment; Regulation; Coal-fired Power Plants

JEL Codes: F18; O33; Q53; Q55; Q56; Q58


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
international economic integration (F15)earlier adoption of environmental regulation (Q52)
domestic trade protection (F13)regulatory burden (L51)
regulatory burden (L51)adoption of regulations (G18)
country size (R12)adoption of regulations (G18)
quality of domestic coal (L71)adoption of environmental regulations (Q52)
election years (K16)adoption of environmental regulations (Q52)

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