Morbidity Costs of Vehicular Air Pollution: Examining Dhaka City in Bangladesh
Published By: SANDEE on eSS | Published Date: April, 19 , 2010This study estimates the morbidity costs of reduction in air pollution in Dhaka, the capital of
Bangladesh, using the Cost-of-Illness (COI) approach. COI is defined as the sum of lost earnings
due to workdays lost or restricted activity days and the mitigation expenditure borne due to
illness. The data for the research comes from seasonal household surveys using health diaries.
We use a random-effects Zero Inflated Poisson regression model to estimate the equation for
lost earnings and use a random-effects Tobit Regression to estimate the equation for mitigation
expenditure. We find that the annual savings from reducing air pollution to meet national safety
standards is Taka 131.37 (USD 1.88) per person from reductions in lost earnings and Taka
150.49 (USD 2.15) per person from reductions in medical expenditure. The annual saving to the
population of Dhaka is Taka 2.39 billion or USD 34.09 million. Our estimates, which are based
on primary data, provide significantly lower estimates of the benefits of reducing air pollution in
Dhaka relative to previous analyses that has relied on the benefit-transfer approach. [SANDEE Working Paper No. 47-10]
Author(s): Tanzir Chowdhury, Mohammad Imran | Posted on: Jul 19, 2010 | Views(935) | Download (1074)