2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10640-016-0041-3
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The Cost of Pollution on Longevity, Welfare and Economic Stability

Abstract: This paper presents an overlapping generations model where pollution, private and public health expenditures are all determinants of longevity. Public expenditures, financed through labour taxation, provide both public health and abatement. We study the role of these three components of longevity on welfare and economic stability. At the steady state, we show that an appropriate fiscal policy may enhance welfare. However, when pollution is heavily harmful for longevity, the economy might experience aggregate i… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
(42 reference statements)
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“…This result goes in the same direction of that obtained by Raffin and Seegmuller (2014) where, at the steady state, the indicator of health and the stock of physical capital are positively dependant. This means that the richer the economy, the better the health status, regardless of the pollution's level.…”
Section: Characterization Of the Equilibriumsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…This result goes in the same direction of that obtained by Raffin and Seegmuller (2014) where, at the steady state, the indicator of health and the stock of physical capital are positively dependant. This means that the richer the economy, the better the health status, regardless of the pollution's level.…”
Section: Characterization Of the Equilibriumsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…7 In Appendix D, we consider an alternative model to check the robustness of the results. Similar to Bhattacharya and Qiao (2007) and Raffin and Seegmuller (2017), the agent's health status is determined by private health-care expenditures, income per capita, and the stock of pollution. Although agents still treat income per capita and the stock of pollution as given, they can actively improve their longevity through private health-care expenditures.…”
Section: Endnotesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chakraborty (2004) develops an overlapping generations (OLG) model with endogenous longevity. A strand of literature augments Chakraborty (2004) by introducing pollution as a determinant of longevity, thus theoretically capturing the link between pollution, longevity, agents’ incentive to save, and the accumulation of physical capital (Jouvet et al, 2010; Pautrel, 2009; Raffin & Seegmuller, 2014, 2017; Varvarigos, 2010, 2014). In the Stokey (1998) framework, firms choose the intensity of pollution, a higher value of which leads to higher output as well as more emissions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Environmental degradation is nonetheless fueled by production activity, 8 whereas cleaning activities supported by the government reduce it. In this paper, the dynamics of the stock of pollution is defined as follows (John & Pecchenino, 1994;Jouvet et al, 2005;Raffin & Seegmuller, 2016): NGAMI AND SEEGMULLER…”
Section: Environmental Degradationmentioning
confidence: 99%