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AREC Home |
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| Voluntary
Pollution Reductions and the Enforcement of Environmental Law: An Empirical
Study of the 33/50 Program Abdoul G. Sam and Robert Innes |
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| [download paper] [research papers listings] | |
| Abstract | |
| We
study empirical determinants and effects of firms' participation in the
EPA's 33/50 voluntary pollution reduction program. We broaden the existing
literature in three principal ways, studying (1) bi-directional links
between participation in the 33/50 program and regulatory enforcement,
(2) effects of implicit boycott threats, and (3) potential impacts of
regulatory preemption incentives. We find evidence that firms' participation
in the 33/50 program was motivated by the expectation of relaxed regulatory
scrutiny, an expectation that was borne out by regulatory practice. 33/50
program participation and pollutant reductions were also prompted by a
firm's likelihood of becoming a boycott target and/or being subject to
environmental interest group lobbying for tighter regulatory standards. |
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© 2007 Dept. of Agricultural & Resource Economics, The University of Arizona
Send comments or questions to arecweb@ag.arizona.edu
Last updated November 8, 2004
Document located at http://ag.arizona.edu/arec/pubs/researchpapers/abstract2004-08.html