logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Bureaucrat incentives reduce crop burning and child mortality in South Asia

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Bureaucrat incentives reduce crop burning and child mortality in South Asia

G. Dipoppa and S. Gulzar

Air pollution is a pressing health issue in South Asia, exacerbated by crop residue burning during winter. This groundbreaking study by Gemma Dipoppa and Saad Gulzar reveals how bureaucratic incentives can effectively reduce crop burning and save lives, showcasing the profound impact of local governance on environmental health.... show more
Abstract
Air pollution in South Asia is a health emergency, responsible for 2 million deaths every year. Crop residue burning accounts for 40–60% of peak pollution during the winter harvest months. Despite being illegal, this practice remains widespread. Any solution to curb the problem necessitates government action at scale. Here we study whether leveraging the incentives of bureaucrats tasked with controlling burning can mitigate this phenomenon. Using a decade of wind, fire and health data from satellites and surveys from the Demographic and Health Surveys Program, we show that crop burning responds to bureaucrat incentives: fires increase by 15% when wind is most likely to direct pollution to neighbouring jurisdictions, and decrease by 14.5% when it pollutes their own. These effects intensify with stronger bureaucratic incentives and capacity. We also find that bureaucrat action against burning deters future polluters, further reducing fires by 13%. Finally, using an atmospheric model, we estimate that one log increase in in utero exposure to pollution from burning raises child mortality by 30–36 deaths per 1,000 births, underscoring the importance of bureaucrat action. Contrary to growing beliefs that the problem of crop burning is intractable, these findings highlight specific ways in which existing bureaucrats, when properly incentivized, can improve environmental management and public health outcomes.
Publisher
Nature
Published On
Oct 23, 2024
Authors
Gemma Dipoppa, Saad Gulzar
Tags
air pollution
South Asia
crop burning
bureaucratic incentives
child mortality
environmental health
winter pollution
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny