VoxDev Development Economics

S7 Ep10: Reducing air pollution: Can markets succeed where regulation fails?

12 snips
Feb 25, 2026
Michael Greenstone, economist and director of EPIC who measures the health costs of air pollution. He discusses particulate pollution’s huge toll and why regulation often fails. He explains a randomized market test in Surat where tradable permits cut pollution, raised compliance, and lowered costs. He outlines enforcement, monitoring needs, and how this approach might scale in India and beyond.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Particulate Pollution Cuts Years Off Life Expectancy

  • Particulate matter is the largest global public health threat, costing the average person about two years of life expectancy.
  • Michael Greenstone notes India averages three and a half years lost, far exceeding rich-country losses of months.
INSIGHT

Missing Health Tradeoffs Weaken Indian Regulation

  • Indian air regulations lack an explicit requirement to trade off health benefits against compliance costs.
  • Michael Greenstone argues this makes pollution a technical nuisance rather than a public‑health priority and weakens policy incentives.
INSIGHT

Markets Allocate Abatement Where It's Cheapest

  • Market-based permit systems set a collective pollution cap and let firms trade rights, letting cheaper abatement happen where it's least costly.
  • He cites the US 1990 SO2 market as the canonical success that cut acid rain at far lower costs than predicted.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app