Too little or too much? Exploring the effectiveness of different policies in air pollution control from technical and non-technical pathways

Xiaowei Ma*, Qingyu Sun, Mei Wang, Chuandong Li

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Most environmental policy studies focus on the technical pathway effect but ignore the non-technical pathway. This paper analyzes the synergistic governance effects of three types of environmental policies on the technical and non-technical pathways. The super-efficient slacks-based measure-data envelopment analysis (SBM-DEA) assesses the green total factor productivity, while the Malmquist index decomposes into pure technical efficiency. The findings indicate that: (1) command-and-control policy has the ‘too-little-of-a-good-thing’ effect, but the policy intensity in most Chinese provinces is strong enough to reduce air pollution, while market-based incentive policy may be ‘too-much-of-a-good-thing’, but Chinese provinces have not reached the inflection point; (2) there are considerable differences in the environmental effects of different policies through technical and non-technical pathways; (3) different policies have various focuses. Command-and-control policy focuses on the non-technical pathway, whereas market-based incentive policy can induce technological progress.

Original languageEnglish
Article number122375
JournalJournal of Environmental Management
Volume369
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2024

Keywords

  • Air pollution
  • Environmental policy
  • Non-technical pathway
  • Policy intensity
  • Pure technical change
  • Technical pathway

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