Bad Air Hurts Health And Productivity, According To New Research From Columbia Business School
Based on detailed data tracking individual investor behavior and air pollution, the study shows that:
- Individual investors are less likely to log into and trade in their online brokerage accounts when air quality worsens, and vice versa.
- Since trading requires both skill and intellectual ability, the authors argue that it can be taken as a proxy for white-collar work productivity.
- The effects are large: in perspective, a one-standard-deviation increase in fine particulate matter reduces trading activity by 8.5% the same magnitude as a one standard deviation increase in sunshine.
Individual productivity translates into individual wages and thus wealth. Consequently, the research suggests that the negative impact of air pollution on workplace performance and the economy at large is far more widespread than previously believed.
"To my knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate a negative impact of pollution on a measure of white collar work productivity at the individual level in western countries," said Columbia Business School Professor
NEW FINDINGS BUILD ON EXISTING BODY OF EVIDENCE
Building on previous studies showing that pollution levels impact everything from productivity in physically arduous jobs and short-term variations in major stock market indexes to student exam performances and baseball umpire game calls, the research sounds a warning for the major economies in
This is particularly true in
To learn more about the cutting-edge research being conducted by
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