1. Health Benefits from Improved Air Quality: Evidence from Pollution Regulations in China's "2+26" Cities.
- Author
-
Xie, Tingting, Wang, Yong, and Yuan, Ye
- Subjects
AIR quality indexes ,CITIES & towns ,REGRESSION discontinuity design ,AIR pollution control ,AIR pollution ,POLLUTION ,AIR quality - Abstract
This study assesses the health benefits of better air quality by examining the causal impact of China's stringent " 2 + 26 " regional air pollution control policy on local air quality and population health. Employing a spatial regression discontinuity design that capitalizes on the policy's location-specific features, we present compelling evidence that the 2 + 26 policy results in an average reduction of 12.2 units in the local Air Quality Index (AQI) and a 47.0% decrease in per capita medical expenditure from 2014 to 2018. A one-unit reduction in AQI corresponds to a 0.88% reduction in per capita annual medical spending, equivalent to RMB 30.2 (US$4.6). These health gains stem from reduced chronic disease prevalence and improved subjective well-being. Nationally, air quality improvement during 2014–2018 could save RMB 674 billion (US$104 billion) annually in national direct medical costs, constituting 11.6% of national medical expenditure in 2018. Our findings underscore the substantial health and welfare gains achievable through pollution controls in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF