Publication | Closed Access
Accounting for Air Pollution Emissions in Measures of State Manufacturing Productivity Growth
389
Citations
0
References
2001
Year
Resource ProductivityProductivity GrowthResource EfficiencyEngineeringAir Pollution MeasurementEconomic AssessmentEnvironmental Impact AssessmentAir QualityEnvironmental EconomicsIndustrial EmissionEconomic GrowthAir Pollution ControlProductivityProductivity EconomicsEco-efficiencyEconomic AnalysisChemical EmissionEconomicsGreenhouse Gas Emission ReductionMalmquist‐luenberger Productivity IndexAdjusted Productivity GrowthAir Pollution EmissionsBusinessAir PollutionEnergy EconomicsPollution
A Malmquist‐Luenberger productivity index is employed to account for both marketed output and the output of pollution abatement activities of U.S. state manufacturing sectors for –1986. The index allows us to decompose the change in productivity into measures of change in efficiency and technical change. By accounting for the change in emissions, average annual productivity growth is 3.6 percent, whereas it is 1.7 percent when emissions are ignored. We also find adjusted productivity growth improved after 1977, and “Frost Belt” states with rapidly growing manufacturing sectors have significantly higher rates of productivity growth than “Sun Belt” states with slow growing manufacturing sectors.