The Cost of Air Pollution for Workers and Firms

Research Seminars: SWEEEP Seminar

Poor air quality negatively affects workers’ health and cognitive functions, but we know little about the countrywide consequences for firms. The paper presented in this ZEW Research Seminar estimates the causal effects of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure on workers’ absenteeism and firms’ monthly sales using unique employer-employee data and granular measures of air pollution in France from 2009 to 2015. The authors exploit variation in air pollution induced by changes in monthly wind directions at the postcode level. They find that a 10% increase in monthly PM2.5 exposure increases worker absenteeism in the same month by 1% and reduces sales in manufacturing, construction, and professional services, with different lags. Sales losses are several orders of magnitude larger than what we would expect if workers’ absenteeism was the only factor affecting firms’ performance. This suggests a potentially large effect of pollution on the productivity of non-absent workers. The authors estimate that reducing air pollution in France in line with the World Health Organization’s guidelines would have saved at least 0.3% of GDP annually in terms of avoided sales losses.

Venue

Online

People

Marion Leroutier PhD

Marion Leroutier // Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), London, United Kingdom

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