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| | Deposit-Refund Systems in Practice and Theory | | Margaret Walls | | Encyclopedia of Energy, Natural Resource, and Environmental Economics, Vol. 3 | J.F. Shogren | Amsterdam: Elsevier | 2013 | | | | | | Fiscal Incentives and Environmental Infrastructure in China | | Antung Anthony Liu, Junjie Zhang | | RFF Discussion Paper 12-36 | September 2012 | | Abstract: This paper provides evidence that China's system of tax revenue sharing is an important explanation for differences in the rate of sewage treatment plant construction among its cities. As a result of the 1994 tax reform, Chinese cities retained different shares of their value-added tax (VAT). Exploiting the persistence of this sharing system, we use the VAT share in 1995 as an instrument for the present fiscal incentives. We find that a 10 percentage point increase in the VAT sharing rate resulted in a 13.8% increase in the construction of sewage treatment capacity. This result suggests that fiscal incentives can play an important role in the provision of pollution-reducing infrastructure. | | | | The Effect of Voluntary Brownfields Programs on Nearby Property Values: Evidence from Illinois | | Joshua Linn | | RFF Discussion Paper 12-35 | August 2012 | | Related journal article | | Abstract: Brownfields are properties for which redevelopment is hampered by known or suspected contamination and by concerns about associated liability. Because failing to redevelop brownfields may negatively affect welfare and the environment, a number of states have created voluntary programs to reduce liability risks and encourage redevelopment of brownfields. For clean or remediated properties, the state certifies that owners of such sites are not subject to federal or state liability under certain conditions. Certification could increase nearby property values because of decreased contamination risk and amenities associated with redeveloping the brownfield. This paper focuses on the Site Remediation Program in Illinois, and estimates the effect of brownfields certification on nearby property values. Employing several strategies to account for unobserved and time-varying variables that may be correlated with certification, I find that certification of a brownfield 0.25 miles away raises property values by about one percent. In aggregate, the program has increased nearby property values by about two percent. | | | | Summary for Policymakers The True Cost of Electric Power: An Inventory of Methodologies to Support Future Decisionmaking in Comparing the Cost and Competitiveness of Electric Generation Technologies | | Dallas Burtraw, Alan Krupnick | | Ren21 | June 2012 | | | | | | The True Cost of Electric Power: An Inventory of Methodologies to Support Future Decisionmaking in Comparing the Cost and Competitiveness of Electric Generation Technologies | | Dallas Burtraw, Alan Krupnick and Gabriel Sampson | | Ren21 | June 2012 | | | | | | Secular Trends, Environmental Regulations, and Electricity Markets | | Dallas Burtraw, Karen L. Palmer, Anthony Paul, Matthew Woerman | | RFF Discussion Paper 12-15 | March 2012 | | Related journal article | | Abstract: The confluence of several pending environmental rulemakings will require billions of dollars of investment across the industry and changes in the operation of facilities. These changes may lead to retirement of some facilities, and there has been much debate about their potential effects on electricity reliability. Only very exceptional circumstances would trigger supply disruptions; however, the changes may affect electricity prices, the generation mix, and industry revenues. Coincident with these new rules, expectations about natural gas prices and future electricity demand growth are changing in ways that also will have substantial effects on the industry. This paper addresses these two sets of issues using a detailed simulation model of the U.S. electricity market. The findings suggest that recent downward adjustments in natural gas prices and electricty demand projections have a substantially larger impact on electricity prices and generation mix than do the new environmental rules. | | | | Policy Response to Pandemic Influenza: The Value of Collective Action | | Georgiy Bobashev, Maureen L. Cropper, Joshua Epstein, Michael Goedecke, Stephen Hutton, Mead Over | | RFF Discussion Paper 11-41 | September 2011 | | Abstract: This paper examines positive externalities and complementarities between countries in the use of antiviral pharmaceuticals to mitigate pandemic influenza. It demonstrates the presence of treatment externalities in simple SIR (susceptible-infectious-recovered) models and simulations of a Global Epidemiological Model. In these simulations, the pandemic spreads from city to city through the international airline network and from cities to rural areas through ground transport. While most treatment benefits are private, spillovers suggest that it is in the self-interest of high-income countries to pay for some antiviral treatment in low-income countries. The most cost-effective policy is to donate doses to the country where the outbreak originates; however, donating doses to low-income countries in proportion to their populations may also be cost-effective. These results depend on the transmissibility of the flu strain, its start date, the efficacy of antivirals in reducing transmissibility, and the proportion of infectious people who can be identified and treated. | | | | Do Some NOx Emissions Have Negative Environmental Damages? Evidence and Implications for Policy | | Arthur G. Fraas and Randall Lutter | | Environmental Science and Technology | September 2011 | Vol. 45, No.17 | | | | | | Use of Anthropometric Measures to Analyze How Sources of Water and Sanitation Affect Children’s Health in Nigeria | | Sunday Olabisi Adewara, Martine Visser | | RFF Discussion Paper EfD 11-02 | April 2011 | | Abstract: We used 2008 DHS data sets to construct child height- and weight-for-age Z-scores and used regression analysis to analyze the effects of different sources of drinking water and sanitation on child health outcomes in Nigeria. We also calculated the probability of a child being stunted or underweight as our measure of malnutrition among children aged 0–59 months. Our results show that both child height and weight Z-scores are positive and significantly related to access to borehole and piped water, and negative and significant for well water. The probabilities of a child being stunted or underweight are both significantly lower for children drinking borehole or piped water, whereas well water has a positive and significant effect on these measures of child health.Children’s access to flush toilets is positive and significantly related to child height- and weight-for-age Z-scores, but the same measures are negatively related to children’s use of pit latrines. In line with this, the probability of a child being stunted or underweight is negative and significantly related to access to flush toilets, but positively related to pit latrines. Our results suggest that increasing access to, or providing, safe drinking water and flush toilets for households will significantly reduce the high incidence of malnutrition and water-borne diseases among children in Nigeria and should be a high priority for policymakers. | | | | Valuing Mortality Risk Reductions | | Maureen L. Cropper, James K. Hammitt, Lisa A. Robinson | | RFF Discussion Paper 11-10 | March 2011 | | Abstract: The value of mortality risk reduction is an important component of the benefits of environmental policies. In recent years, the number, scope, and quality of valuation studies have increased dramatically. Revealed preference studies of wage compensation for occupational risks, on which analysts have primarily relied, have benefited from improved data and statistical methods. Stated preference research has improved methodologically and expanded dramatically. Studies are now available for several health conditions associated with environmental causes, and researchers have explored many issues concerning the validity of the estimates. With the growing numbers of both types of studies, several meta-analyses have become available that provide insight into the results of both methods. Challenges remain, including better understanding of the persistently smaller estimates from stated preference than from wage differential studies and of how valuation depends on the individual’s age, health status, and characteristics of the illnesses most frequently associated with environmental causes. | | | | The State of the Great Outdoors: Charting Recent Trends, Assessing Funding Needs, and Understanding Americans' Connection to Nature | | Margaret Walls | | Journal of Physical Activity and Health | January 2011 | Volume 141, No. 2 | | | | | | The Role of Land Certification in Reducing Gender Gaps in Productivity in Rural Ethiopia | | Mintewab Bezabih, Stein Holden | | RFF Discussion Paper EfD 10-23 | November 2010 | | Abstract: The importance of providing secure land rights to smallholder farmers in developing countries is now widely recognized. In line with this, our paper analyzes the impact of land certification on boosting productivity of female-headed households in Ethiopia, which are believed to be systematically more tenure insecure than their male counterparts. Based on parametric and semi-parametric analyses, the impact of certification on plot-level productivity is positive and significant. However, certification has different impacts on male and female productivity: male-headed households gain significantly and women gain only modestly. Hence, the results indicate that, while certification is clearly beneficial to farm-level productivity, it does not necessarily lead to more gains for female-headed households. | | | | The Value of Household Water Service Quality in Lahore, Pakistan | | Agha Ali Akram and Sheila Olmstead | | Environmental and Resource Economics | June 2011 | Vol. 49, No. 2 | pp. 173-198 | | | | | | Validity of ICD-9-CM Coding for Identifying Incident Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) Infections: Is MRSA Coded as a Chronic Disease? | | Schweizer ML, Eber MR, Laxminarayan R, Furuno JP, Popvich KJ, Hota B, Rubin MA, Perenevich EN | | Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | | | | | | Willpower and the Optimal Control of Visceral Urges | | Emre Ozdenoren, Dan Silverman, Stephen W. Salant | | RFF Discussion Paper 10-35 | July 2010 | | Abstract: Common intuition and experimental psychology suggest that the ability to self-regulate ("willpower") is a depletable resource. We investigate the behavior of an agent with limited willpower whooptimally consumes over time an endowment of a tempting and storable consumption good or "cake". We assume that restraining consumption below the most tempting feasible rate requires willpower. Any willpower not used to regulate consumption may be valuable in controlling other urges. Willpower thus links otherwise unrelated behaviors requiring self-control. An agent with limited willpower will display apparent domain-speci?c time preference. Such an agent will almost never perfectly smooth his consumption, even when it is feasible to do so. Whether the agent relaxes control of his consumption over time (as experimental psychologists predict) or tightens it (as most behavioral theories predict) depends in our model on the net e¤ect of two analytically distinct and opposing forces. | | | | Adoption and Impact of Improved Groundnut Varieties on Rural Poverty: Evidence from Rural Uganda | | Menale Kassie, Bekele Shiferaw, Geoffrey Muricho | | RFF Discussion Paper EfD 10-11 | May 2010 | | Abstract: This paper evaluates the ex-post impact of adopting improved groundnut varieties on crop income and rural poverty in rural Uganda. The study utilizes cross-sectional farm household data collected in 2006 in seven districts of Uganda. We estimated the average adoption premium using propensity score matching (PSM), poverty dominance analysis tests, and a linear regression model to check robustness of results. Poverty dominance analysis tests and linear regression estimates are based on matched observations of adopters and non-adopters obtained from the PSM. This helped us estimate the true welfare effect of technology adoption by controlling for the role of selection problem on production and adoption decisions. Furthermore, we checked covariate balancing with a standardized bias measure and sensitivity of the estimated adoption effect to unobserved selection bias, using the Rosenbaum bounds procedure. The paper computes income-based poverty measures and investigates their sensitivity to the use of different poverty lines. We found that adoption of improved groundnut technologies has a significant positive impact on crop income and poverty reduction. These results are not sensitive to unobserved selection bias; therefore, we can be confident that the estimated adoption effect indicates a pure effect of improved groundnut technology adoption. | | | | Ensuring Food Safety around the Globe: The Many Roles of Risk Analysis from Risk Ranking to Microbial Risk Assessment. | | Sandra Hoffmann | | Risk Analysis | Vol. 30, No. 5 | 711-714 | | | | | | Should new antimalarial drugs be subsidized? | | Laxminarayan, R. I.W.H. Parry, E. Klein, D.L. Smith | | Journal of Health Economics | summer 2010 | Vol. 29 | 445–456 | | | | | | Attributable economic and health costs of hospital-acquired infections in the United States, 1998–2006 | | Eber, M., R. Laxminarayan, E. Perencevich, A. Malani | | Archives of Internal Medicine | 2010 | Vol.10, No. 4 | pp. 347-353 | | | | | | Investments in Land Conservation in the Ethiopian Highlands: A Household Plot-Level Analysis of the Roles of Poverty, Tenure Security, and Market Incentives | | Genanew Bekele, Alemu Mekonnen | | RFF Discussion Paper EfD 10-09 | March 2010 | | Abstract: Land degradation is a major problem undermining land productivity in the highlands of Ethiopia. This study explores the factors that affect farm households’ decisions at the plot level to investin land conservation and how much to invest, focusing on the roles of poverty, land tenure security, and market access. Unlike most other studies, we used a double-hurdle model in the analysis with panel datacollected in a household survey of 6,408 plots in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. The results suggest that the decisions to adopt land conservation investment and how much to invest appear to be explained by different processes. Poverty-related factors seem to have a mixed effect on both the adoption and intensity decisions. While a farmer’s adoption decision is influenced by whether or not the plot is owner-operated (a measure of risk for the immediate period), intensity of conservation is determined by expectation of the certainty of cultivating the land for the next five years (a measure of risk for the longer term), farmer’s belief of land ownership, and distance from plot to home. | | | |
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