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Pollution Haven and Corruption Paradise
Institution:1. School of Resource & Environmental Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430079, China;2. School of Public Administration, University of International Business and Economics, Beijing 100029, China;3. College of Resources and Environment, Shandong Agricultural University, Taian 271018, China;4. School of Low Carbon Economics, Hubei University of Economics, Wuhan 430205, China;5. Center for Environmental Progress, New York City, NY 10044, USA;6. Plateau Atmosphere and Environment Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, School of Atmospheric Sciences, Chengdu University of Information Technology, Chengdu 610225, China
Abstract:In this paper, we present a simple theoretical extension from the Economic Geography literature to characterize the main features of pollution havens (lax environmental regulation, good market access to high-income countries and corruption opportunities). Using structural and reduced-form estimations, we find that pollution havens are not a “popular myth” for European firms, laxer environmental standards significantly explain the location choice of polluting affiliates. We analyze in depth the role of trade costs (using various bilateral and multilateral measures), a 1% increase in access to the European market from a pollution haven fosters relocation there by 0.1%. We also find that corruption lowers environmental standards, which strongly attract polluting firms: a 1% increase of corruption fuels relocation by 0.28%. We test the economic significance of these empirical findings via simulations. The protection of the European market (e.g., a carbon tax on imports) to stop relocations to pollution havens must be high (a decrease of the European market for Morocco and Tunisia equivalent to 13%) not to say prohibitive (31% for China).
Keywords:Multinational firms  Environmental regulation  Europe  Corruption  Market access  Trade
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