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Effects of air pollution on labor supply: Evidence from Japan

Daichi Yamada, Daiju Narita

2025Journal of Environmental Economics and Management8 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We empirically examine the effects of fine particulate matter (PM 2.5 ) pollution on labor supply based on data from Japan, a country in which the PM 2.5 level is generally low to moderate. PM 2.5 can adversely affect health and cause affected workers to reduce labor supply, whereas workers and firms can take reactive measures to mitigate labor supply losses. We aim to investigate the causal effects of PM 2.5 pollution, managing potential endogeneity of PM 2.5 pollution by using nationally representative panel data and utilizing two exogenous phenomena: thermal inversion events and transboundary pollution transport from the Asian continent. The results robustly show that increases in PM 2.5 levels decrease monthly labor hours. Even moderate levels of PM 2.5 pollution affect labor supply on a national scale. Our findings are related to current international discussions on low-to-moderate levels of air pollution.

Topics & Concepts

EconomicsNatural resource economicsPollutionAir pollutionLabour economicsEnvironmental scienceChemistryEcologyBiologyOrganic chemistryAir Quality and Health ImpactsEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesEnergy, Environment, Economic Growth
Effects of air pollution on labor supply: Evidence from Japan | Litcius