The environmental smile curve: input-output evidence on the pollution haven hypothesis
研究发现全球价值链中发展中国家集中在高排放的中游环节,发达国家占据清洁的上游和下游,这种环境不平等随价值链深化而加剧,且与价值捕获的不对称分布相呼应。
• CO 2 emissions are unevenly distributed across GVC stages: developing economies cluster in emission-intensive midstream, advanced in cleaner upstream/downstream. • Reliance on foreign intermediates further amplifies environmental inequality along GVCs. • These asymmetries have intensified over the past 25 years together with the rise of GVCs. • The distribution of emissions mirrors the distribution of value capture, suggesting that unequal exchange is structurally embedded in the organization of GVCs. • For developing economies, GVC integration may entail a double asymmetry: weaker value capture and heavier pollution burdens. This paper examines how the fragmentation of production across Global Value Chains (GVCs) generates both economic and environmental inequalities. Integrating OECD ICIO and CO 2 emission data, our analysis reveals an environmental smile curve , where environmental and economic downgrading co-occur in middle segments of GVCs, reinforcing global inequalities. These disparities intensify with deeper GVC penetration, challenging the decoupling narrative of green growth. By integrating labour and emission data, we provide novel evidence of how GVCs structurally embed asymmetric power relations between production segments, generating unequal ecological and economic burdens across the globe. While the Global North has strategically benefited from GVCs, the Global South has experienced the heightening of its peripheral and subordinated position.