New paper on transboundary air pollution (from China to Korea)’s negative impacts on the housing prices in Korea

Abstract: We estimate the degree and scope of PM2.5-induced negative price shock in Korea’s local housing markets, taking a two-stage hedonic approach. For the analysis, Korea’s local PM2.5 levels are treated as endogenous and are instrumented with regional air pollutants from China. We find that a unit µg/m3 PM2.5 level increase in a Korean city is associated with a 3.7% decline in local residential property value. Long-range transboundary pollution has significant effects on Korea’s local PM2.5 levels with an elasticity of 0.05. These results enrich the sparse hedonic literature on local air-quality valuation in connection to long-range transboundary pollution in East Asia. The advanced methodological features presented in our two-staged identification strategy with a novel instrument is another contribution of this paper.

Kyung-Min Nam, Yifu Ou, Euijune Kim and Siqi Zheng. Air Pollution and Housing Values in Korea: A Hedonic analysis with Long-range Transboundary Pollution as an Instrument. Environmental and Resource Economics. Forthcoming.

Previous
Previous

New paper on neighborhood attributes and obesity risks in Singapore

Next
Next

Erez's new book on MIT News!