环境舒适性的监管与资本化:来自马萨诸塞州有毒物质释放清单的证据

Regulation and Capitalization of Environmental Amenities: Evidence from the Toxic Release Inventory in Massachusetts

Review of Economics and Statistics · 2003
被引 191
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

利用马萨诸塞州房屋价格数据,评估有毒物质释放清单(TRI)这一信息披露法规的效果,发现公众难以有效处理复杂的有害排放信息,质疑了知情权法规作为环境监管工具的有效性。

Abstract

Environmental regulation in the United States has undergone a slow evolution from command and control strategies towards market-based regulations. One such innovation is the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI), a regulation that requires polluting firms to publicly disclose information about their toxic emissions. The basic tenet of this regulation is that it corrects for informational asymmetries between polluters and households, allowing communities to pressure polluters to decrease their emissions. Policy-makers have judged the TRI a tremendous success, as national releases declined by 43% between 1988 and 1999. Yet many of the fundamental problems which are known to lead to the classic failure of the Coase theorem (such as high transaction costs and difficulties in organizing) cast doubt on the effectiveness of disclosure rules, alone, to lead to an efficient outcome in the case of pollution. We use an event study methodology with high-quality data on house prices and other local attributes to assess the extent to which the public values changes in toxic releases and thus the success of TRI. Our major findings include: (1) declines in toxic releases appear unrelated to any political economy variables that might lead to public activism; (2) initial information released under TRI had no significant effect on the distribution of house prices; and (3) house prices show no significant impact of declines in reported toxic releases over time. Standard errors are small enough that we can reject the hypothesis that large declines in toxic releases lead to more than a 0.5% increase in house prices. These results also hold when we control for differences in the availability of information on TRI and the possible effect of expectations. Our findings cast doubt on the ability of the public to process complex information on hazardous emissions and support the Coase theorem in that right-to-know laws such as TRI may not be the most effective form of environmental regulation. © 2003 President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

环境规制信息披露有毒物质排放清单房价资本化