Why has Europe Become Environmentally Cleaner? Decomposing the Roles of Fiscal, Trade and Environmental Policies
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2014Metadata
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López Vega, Ramón
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Why has Europe Become Environmentally Cleaner? Decomposing the Roles of Fiscal, Trade and Environmental Policies
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Abstract
This paper examines the role of fiscal policy, trade and energy taxes on environmental
quality in Europe using disaggregated data at the monitoring station level for the 12
richest European countries spanning the period from 1995 to 2008. Our estimations show
that fiscal policies and energy taxes are important determinants of pollution through various
mechanisms. We find that increasing the share of fiscal spending in GDP and shifting the
emphasis towards spending in public goods and against non-social subsidies significantly
lower the concentrations of sulfur dioxide and ozone but not nitrogen dioxide. At the same
time, energy taxes reduce nitrogen dioxide concentrations but have no effect on ozone and
sulfur dioxide. Finally trade openness has a direct effect on sulfur dioxide but no effect on
nitrogen dioxide or ozone. Our estimates account for time-varying unobserved heterogeneity.
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This research was part of GRASP-CEPR research project funded by the European Commission titled
“Growth and Sustainability Policies for Europe” (Ref. SSH-CT-2009-244725).
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Environ Resource Econ (2014) 58:91–108
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