Skip to main content

Journal of Public Economics

The air quality and well-being effects of low emission zones

This study provides the first evidence of the subjective well-being impacts of low emission zones (LEZs) while also undertaking a comprehensive analysis of their air quality effects. We identify causal impacts by exploiting the zones’ introduction date with difference-in-differences designs robust to staggered implementations and time-varying treatment effects. Results show air quality improvements through reductions in traffic-related pollutants despite ground-level ozone increases and harmful spatial pollution spillovers. We further find that the zones cause transitory yet long-lasting reductions in individuals’ life satisfaction despite health benefits, suggesting that the subjective well-being effects of restricting mobility potentially outweigh those of improved health.

Sarmiento, L., N. Wägner and A. Zaklan (2023), The air quality and well-being effects of low emission zones. Journal of Public Economics, 227, 105014

DOI: 10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.105014