Ej. Ringquist, DOES REGULATION MATTER - EVALUATING THE EFFECTS OF STATE AIR-POLLUTION CONTROL PROGRAMS, The Journal of politics, 55(4), 1993, pp. 1022-1045
Air pollution emissions have declined significantly since the passage
of the Clean Air Act (CAA) of 1970. Most policy observers have gone on
to infer that the CAA has been the cause of these emissions reduction
s, though this claim has not received close empirical examination. In
short, while air pollution emissions have been reduced, we do not know
if these reductions are the result of pollution control regulation. I
n an effort to expand the study of policy outcomes, this article evalu
ates the effects various regulatory efforts have had on state air qual
ity. The contention set forth here is that the strength of a state's a
ir quality programs, along with other variables representing a politic
al commitment to pollution control, have significant effects upon air
pollutant emission levels. Using multiple regression and path analysis
, these effects of regulation are apparent even when controlling for c
hanges in economic activity, economic infrastructure, and fuel consump
tion, enabling us to conclude that in air pollution control, regulatio
n does matter.