Escalation of Scrutiny: The Gains from Dynamic Enforcement of Environmental Regulations
Abstract
Defining an enforcement policy is a key component of reducing harmfulindustrial emissions through regulation, yet there is little empirical evidence for what
characterizes an effective strategy. Current policy is characterized by the use of statedependent
enforcement, or steeply increasing penalties according to a firm's previous
violation history. However, empirical evaluation of state-dependent enforcement has
been hampered by the fact that under this policy, firms respond to both today's penalties
and tomorrow's future expected penalties.
This paper estimates the effect of state-dependent enforcement on compliance
with the Clean Air Act using data on plant-level enforcement, emissions, and investment
from the U.S. manufacturing sector. Using a dynamic structural model of firm investment
in environmental remediation over time, I examine alternative enforcement strategies for
reducing emissions that meet current constraints on the number of inspections, warnings,
fines, and penalties collected. The model utilizes a unique identification strategy that
exploits exogenous variation in the ratio of state regulatory budgets to enforcement
caseloads over time. That also allows for unobserved time-variant heterogeneity in plant
investment costs.
I find that: (i) If penalties were no longer dependent on a plant's previous
violation history, overall noncompliance would increase from 27% to 33%; (ii) There are
significant emissions reductions associated with increasing the penalties for plants with
the worst violation history, while lowering the expected penalties for all other plants; and
(iii) There would be an increase in aggregate emissions if the criteria for firms to receive
the maximum penalty was weakened.
Outside of air pollution, the empirical framework and results contribute to a
number of additional settings where state-dependent enforcement is practiced. These
settings include the use of watch lists for the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act,
enforcement of the Clean Water Act, and spill monitoring practices for oil wells in North
Dakota.