Environmental fiscal federalism and atmospheric pollution: A tale of two Indian cities

Date

2021-02

Authors

Nath, Shyam
Madhoo, Yeti Nisha

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University

Access Statement

Open Access

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

This paper empirically tests the suitability of local vs state government expenditure in providing an environmental public good, namely airborne pollution control in two municipal areas in India. We employ an innovative methodology where factual and counterfactual state and local expenditure regimes are constructed to capture different degrees of decentralization. Econometric results highlight higher efficacy of state level expenditure (centralization) as spillover/regional effects become important. Particularly, superiority of state expenditure is evident in the control of suspended particulate matter (SPM), which has wide cross-boundary effects. Local expenditure and the counterfactual of local expenditure for uniform provision (both decentralized provision modes) emerge as more effective than state to control point-source local pollutant SO2. However, they may also supplement the effects generated by state expenditure in the case of NO2 emissions, which entail spillovers and seem amenable to pressure group influence at local level.

Description

Keywords

Environmental governance, fiscal decentralization, atmospheric pollution, spillover effects, non-point source pollution, India

Citation

Source

Australia South Asia Research Centre Working Papers

Type

Working/Technical Paper

Book Title

Entity type

Publication

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until