Litcius/Paper detail

Air Pollution and the Labor Market: Evidence from Wildfire Smoke

Mark Borgschulte, David Molitor, Eric Zou

2022The Review of Economics and Statistics76 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract We study how air pollution impacts the U.S. labor market by analyzing the effects of drifting wildfire smoke. We link satellite-based smoke plume data with labor market outcomes to estimate that an additional day of smoke exposure reduces quarterly earnings by about 0.1%. Extensive margin responses, including employment reductions and labor force exits, explain 13% of the overall earnings losses. The implied welfare costs from lost earnings due to air pollution exposure is on par with standard valuations of the mortality burden. The findings highlight the importance of labor market channels in air pollution policy responses.

Topics & Concepts

EarningsSmokeEconomicsAir pollutionWelfarePollutionMargin (machine learning)GeographyMeteorologyFinanceEcologyMachine learningComputer scienceChemistryOrganic chemistryBiologyMarket economyAir Quality and Health ImpactsGlobal Health Care IssuesInsurance, Mortality, Demography, Risk Management