Abstract
Pollution (in this term, air pollution) is an environmental phenomenon that negatively impacts the lives of the broader community and harms all aspects of the human dimension, such as health and the economy. This study aims to quantify the impact of pollution on worker productivity in developing countries using longitudinal data from Indonesia in two periods (2007 and 2014) and utilizing satellite data to represent air pollution data better. This study uses an instrumental variable (IV) approach and expands it by quantifying health aspects as one of the transmissions in the relationship between pollution and productivity. The result is that pollution negatively impacts worker productivity, with a dominant negative effect transmitted by health factors and determines their productivity. For this reason, the government is involved in tackling increasing pollution to minimize the increase in disease cases while minimizing economic losses from this phenomenon in the future.
Author
Ester Dwi Sabtu
Muhammad Putra
Qisha Quarina
Reseach Area
Research Topic
Time Allocation and Labor Supply
Human Capital
Pollution Control Adoption and CostsĀ
Air PollutionĀ
Keywords
Labor Productivity
Instrumental Variable (IV)
Mediation Analysis
Developing Country