Description

Book Synopsis
The Economics of Air Pollution in China makes the case that the trade-off between growth and environment is not inevitable. In his ambitious proposal to tackle severe air pollution, Ma Jun argues that in targeting pollution, China has a real opportunity to undertake significant structural economic reforms that would support long-term growth.

Trade Review
Many engineering solutions to China's huge pollution problem have been proposed, yet The Economics of Air Pollution in China correctly identifies the structural drivers of pollution and sets out the required changes in economic, financial, and fiscal policies. Meticulous, comprehensive, and rooted in robust economic theory, the book's messages are relevant to other economies that seek environmentally sustainable growth. -- Adair Turner, chairman of the Institute of New Economic Thinking and former chairman of UK Financial Services Authority Ma Jun developed a fascinating approach to analyzing the economic causes of and response to China's problem of air pollution. His ideas should have much powerful applications in policy-making for promoting environmentally sustainable growth both in China and the rest of the world. His arguments that firms and investors' objective functions can be modified from 'profit maximization only' to include 'social responsibility' will have profound implications for economic theory and public policy debate. -- Nicholas Stern, London School of Economics, president of the British Academy, and former chief economist of the World Bank For the first time, The Economics of Air Pollution in China systemically studied the issue of air pollution in China from an economic perspective, which will have important academic and policy implications. A profound view from this book is that while clean technologies are important in reducing emissions, greater efforts need to be made to resolve China's economic structural problems, such as excessive reliance on heavy manufacturing, coal, and road transportation. -- Wu Jinglian, senior researcher, China State Council Development Research Center As chief economist of the PBOC and cochair of the G20 Green Finance Study Group, Ma Jun has played a groundbreaking role in the development of China's green financial system and in promoting a global consensus of aligning the world's financial system to environmentally sustainable growth. The collaboration between UNEP and China (including Ma Jun's team) on green finance was a true success story. -- Achim Steiner, former United Nations undersecretary general and executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme Economic growth and environmental protection are often pitted against each other as trade-offs-a view that continues to dominate in China. Ma Jun's book, however, shows that such a trade-off isn't necessary. Based on robust economic analysis and concrete prescriptions, Ma Jun's work makes a strong case for why continued economic reforms can deliver China a twofer: healthy economic growth and clearer skies and cleaner environment. This is important work that should be read by policy makers in both China and the United States. -- Henry M. Paulson Jr., chairman of the Paulson Institute, former U.S. Secretary of Treasury, and author of Dealing with China

Table of Contents
Preface Introduction Part I. Getting to 30 mug/m3 Introduction to Part One 1. PM2.5 Data, Reduction Model, and Policy Package 2. Environmental Actions: Necessary but Insufficient 3. Structural Adjustment: The What and the How 4. Enabling Change: Incentives Needed 5. The Cleanup and Economic Growth Part II. Cases Studies and Green Finance 6. Case Study: Shanghai 7. Case Study: Beijing 8. How to Deal with Coal 9. Making Green Finance Work in China Notes Index

The Economics of Air Pollution in China

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A Hardback by Jun Ma

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    View other formats and editions of The Economics of Air Pollution in China by Jun Ma

    Publisher: Columbia University Press
    Publication Date: 29/11/2016
    ISBN13: 9780231174947, 978-0231174947
    ISBN10: 0231174942

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    The Economics of Air Pollution in China makes the case that the trade-off between growth and environment is not inevitable. In his ambitious proposal to tackle severe air pollution, Ma Jun argues that in targeting pollution, China has a real opportunity to undertake significant structural economic reforms that would support long-term growth.

    Trade Review
    Many engineering solutions to China's huge pollution problem have been proposed, yet The Economics of Air Pollution in China correctly identifies the structural drivers of pollution and sets out the required changes in economic, financial, and fiscal policies. Meticulous, comprehensive, and rooted in robust economic theory, the book's messages are relevant to other economies that seek environmentally sustainable growth. -- Adair Turner, chairman of the Institute of New Economic Thinking and former chairman of UK Financial Services Authority Ma Jun developed a fascinating approach to analyzing the economic causes of and response to China's problem of air pollution. His ideas should have much powerful applications in policy-making for promoting environmentally sustainable growth both in China and the rest of the world. His arguments that firms and investors' objective functions can be modified from 'profit maximization only' to include 'social responsibility' will have profound implications for economic theory and public policy debate. -- Nicholas Stern, London School of Economics, president of the British Academy, and former chief economist of the World Bank For the first time, The Economics of Air Pollution in China systemically studied the issue of air pollution in China from an economic perspective, which will have important academic and policy implications. A profound view from this book is that while clean technologies are important in reducing emissions, greater efforts need to be made to resolve China's economic structural problems, such as excessive reliance on heavy manufacturing, coal, and road transportation. -- Wu Jinglian, senior researcher, China State Council Development Research Center As chief economist of the PBOC and cochair of the G20 Green Finance Study Group, Ma Jun has played a groundbreaking role in the development of China's green financial system and in promoting a global consensus of aligning the world's financial system to environmentally sustainable growth. The collaboration between UNEP and China (including Ma Jun's team) on green finance was a true success story. -- Achim Steiner, former United Nations undersecretary general and executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme Economic growth and environmental protection are often pitted against each other as trade-offs-a view that continues to dominate in China. Ma Jun's book, however, shows that such a trade-off isn't necessary. Based on robust economic analysis and concrete prescriptions, Ma Jun's work makes a strong case for why continued economic reforms can deliver China a twofer: healthy economic growth and clearer skies and cleaner environment. This is important work that should be read by policy makers in both China and the United States. -- Henry M. Paulson Jr., chairman of the Paulson Institute, former U.S. Secretary of Treasury, and author of Dealing with China

    Table of Contents
    Preface Introduction Part I. Getting to 30 mug/m3 Introduction to Part One 1. PM2.5 Data, Reduction Model, and Policy Package 2. Environmental Actions: Necessary but Insufficient 3. Structural Adjustment: The What and the How 4. Enabling Change: Incentives Needed 5. The Cleanup and Economic Growth Part II. Cases Studies and Green Finance 6. Case Study: Shanghai 7. Case Study: Beijing 8. How to Deal with Coal 9. Making Green Finance Work in China Notes Index

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