Informal Emissions

Environmental regulations and their enforcement play a critical role in reducing emissions and their devastating effects on humanity and the environment. However, many developing countries have large informal sectors—accounting for more than 70 per...

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Main Authors: Burgi, Constantin, Hovhannisyan, Shoghik, Joshi, Santosh Ram, Alkhuzam, Ahmad F.
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099425208312212101/IDU0f8fd577a0ab8a0429809bb90e96aaf4d0cd5
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37946
id okr-10986-37946
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-379462022-09-01T05:10:41Z Informal Emissions Burgi, Constantin Hovhannisyan, Shoghik Joshi, Santosh Ram Alkhuzam, Ahmad F. ENVIRONMENTAL RISK INFORMAL COMMERCIAL EMISSIONS EMISSION ACCOUNTING INFORMAL WORK INFORMAL EMPLOYERS FOSSIL FUEL CONSUMPTION GREENHOUSE GAS EMMISSIONS ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION Environmental regulations and their enforcement play a critical role in reducing emissions and their devastating effects on humanity and the environment. However, many developing countries have large informal sectors—accounting for more than 70 percent of total employment, that operate outside government control. The presence of the informal sector could have detrimental consequences on the environment as informal firms do not comply with regulations, which could jeopardize the effectiveness of environmental policies. The paper uses reduced form equations to estimate the relationship between both CO2 and non-CO2 emissions per value added and the informal sector measured as the share of informal workers in total across countries. The estimates indicate that emissions per value added in the informal sector are higher as opposed to in the formal sector. At the sector level, higher informality is associated with lower CO2 emissions per value added only in manufacturing and other services sectors. In particular, a one percentage point increase in the share of informal workers in total sector employment reduces the CO2 emissions per value added by 1.44 percent in manufacturing and 1.773 percent in services. This implies that the magnitude of emissions per value added in the formal sector relative to the informal sector is ambiguous. Sector-specific estimations for non-CO2 emissions yield positive significant coefficients for agriculture, trade, mining, and utilities and a negative significant coefficient for manufacturing. 2022-08-31T19:16:26Z 2022-08-31T19:16:26Z 2022-08 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099425208312212101/IDU0f8fd577a0ab8a0429809bb90e96aaf4d0cd5 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37946 English en Policy Research Working Papers;10158 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
English
topic ENVIRONMENTAL RISK
INFORMAL COMMERCIAL EMISSIONS
EMISSION ACCOUNTING
INFORMAL WORK
INFORMAL EMPLOYERS
FOSSIL FUEL CONSUMPTION
GREENHOUSE GAS EMMISSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION
spellingShingle ENVIRONMENTAL RISK
INFORMAL COMMERCIAL EMISSIONS
EMISSION ACCOUNTING
INFORMAL WORK
INFORMAL EMPLOYERS
FOSSIL FUEL CONSUMPTION
GREENHOUSE GAS EMMISSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION
Burgi, Constantin
Hovhannisyan, Shoghik
Joshi, Santosh Ram
Alkhuzam, Ahmad F.
Informal Emissions
relation Policy Research Working Papers;10158
description Environmental regulations and their enforcement play a critical role in reducing emissions and their devastating effects on humanity and the environment. However, many developing countries have large informal sectors—accounting for more than 70 percent of total employment, that operate outside government control. The presence of the informal sector could have detrimental consequences on the environment as informal firms do not comply with regulations, which could jeopardize the effectiveness of environmental policies. The paper uses reduced form equations to estimate the relationship between both CO2 and non-CO2 emissions per value added and the informal sector measured as the share of informal workers in total across countries. The estimates indicate that emissions per value added in the informal sector are higher as opposed to in the formal sector. At the sector level, higher informality is associated with lower CO2 emissions per value added only in manufacturing and other services sectors. In particular, a one percentage point increase in the share of informal workers in total sector employment reduces the CO2 emissions per value added by 1.44 percent in manufacturing and 1.773 percent in services. This implies that the magnitude of emissions per value added in the formal sector relative to the informal sector is ambiguous. Sector-specific estimations for non-CO2 emissions yield positive significant coefficients for agriculture, trade, mining, and utilities and a negative significant coefficient for manufacturing.
format Working Paper
author Burgi, Constantin
Hovhannisyan, Shoghik
Joshi, Santosh Ram
Alkhuzam, Ahmad F.
author_facet Burgi, Constantin
Hovhannisyan, Shoghik
Joshi, Santosh Ram
Alkhuzam, Ahmad F.
author_sort Burgi, Constantin
title Informal Emissions
title_short Informal Emissions
title_full Informal Emissions
title_fullStr Informal Emissions
title_full_unstemmed Informal Emissions
title_sort informal emissions
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099425208312212101/IDU0f8fd577a0ab8a0429809bb90e96aaf4d0cd5
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37946
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