An edition of Does hazardous waste matter? (2005)

Does hazardous waste matter?

evidence from the housing market and the Superfund program

Does hazardous waste matter?
Michael Greenstone, Michael Gr ...
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Last edited by WorkBot
December 15, 2009 | History
An edition of Does hazardous waste matter? (2005)

Does hazardous waste matter?

evidence from the housing market and the Superfund program

"Approximately $30 billion (2000$) has been spent on Superfund clean-ups of hazardous waste sites, and remediation efforts are incomplete at roughly half of the 1,500 Superfund sites. This study estimates the effect of Superfund clean-ups on local housing price appreciation. We compare housing price growth in the areas surrounding the first 400 hazardous waste sites to be cleaned up through the Superfund program to the areas surrounding the 290 sites that narrowly missed qualifying for these clean-ups. We cannot reject that the clean-ups had no effect on local housing price growth, nearly two decades after these sites became eligible for them. This finding is robust to a series of specification checks, including the application of a quasi-experimental regression discontinuity design based on knowledge of the selection rule. Overall, the preferred estimates suggest that the benefits of Superfund clean-ups as measured through the housing market are substantially lower than the $43 million mean cost of Superfund clean-ups"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
49

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Does hazardous waste matter?
Cover of: Does hazardous waste matter?
Does hazardous waste matter?: evidence from the housing market and the superfund program
2005, National Bureau of Economic Research
Electronic resource in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

"November 2005."

Cover title.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 46-49).

Also available in PDF from the NBER world wide web site (www.nber.org).

Published in
Cambridge, Mass
Series
NBER working paper paper series -- no. 11790., Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research) -- working paper no. 11790.

The Physical Object

Pagination
49, [19] p. :
Number of pages
49

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL17628434M
OCLC/WorldCat
62365481

Source records

Oregon Libraries MARC record

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December 15, 2009 Edited by WorkBot link works
April 25, 2009 Edited by ImportBot add OCLC number
September 29, 2008 Created by ImportBot Imported from Oregon Libraries MARC record