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02004 am a22002053u 4500 |
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|a dc
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|a Zheng, Siqi
|e author
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and Planning
|e contributor
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Real Estate
|e contributor
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|a Zhang, Xiaonan
|e author
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|a Sun, Weizeng
|e author
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|a Lin, Chengtao
|e author
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|a Air pollution and elite college graduates' job location choice: evidence from China
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|b Springer Science and Business Media LLC,
|c 2020-10-02T19:44:54Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/127801
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|a In this paper, we examine the impact of air pollution on the job location choice of a highly educated labor force. Using the administrative job contract records of all graduates from Tsinghua University from 2005 to 2016, we find that air pollution significantly reduces the probability of elite graduates accepting job offers in a polluted city. Specifically, all else equal, if a city's PM2.5 level increases by 10 μg/m3, the share of Tsinghua graduates choosing that city will decrease by 0.23 percentage point (9% of the mean value). This "crowding-out" effect is larger for master's and doctoral graduates, but insignificant for undergraduates. A placebo test finds this effect does not exist for individuals who had signed a job contract prior to university admission, which strengthens our finding. Heterogeneity analysis indicates that males, students who grew up in cleaner provinces, and students graduating from school of the environment are more sensitive to air pollution. Different levels of preference for clean air and tolerance to pollution, as well as whether having the knowledge of pollution's harms, can effectively explain the heterogeneous effect of air pollution's impacts on job location choices of those elites.
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|a en
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|a Article
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|t Annals of Regional Science
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