Air pollution in India: New findings on how to reduce crop burning
Air pollution is the top preventable cause of mortality in many low- and middle-income countries, including India. A major source of air pollution in some agricultural regions is seasonal fires caused by farmers burning crop residue, which also harms neighboring areas due to wind flows. This represents a major externality – an indirect cost to the public arising from individuals’ actions – and one the Indian government has introduced multiple measures to reduce, with limited efficacy.
Can Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES), whereby cash transfers are given out conditional on not burning, improve on the status quo? Rohini Pande and coauthors used a randomized controlled trial to test Payments for Ecosystem Services contracts of different designs to reduce crop burning in northern India. Relative to standard PES, where payments are only made if farmers don’t burn, providing partial upfront payments is more effective at reducing burning.
Results
At a Glance-
A randomized controlled trial (RCT) in the northern Indian state of Punjab found that Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) contracts with partial upfront payments reduced crop residue burning by 10 percentage points, while standard PES contracts without upfront payments showed no effect on burning compared to the control group.
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PES contracts with partial upfront payments increased farmers’ trust that they would receive the full cash transfer for complying with the condition against crop burning, and potentially also eased their liquidity constraints.
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If scaled up by governments or environmental organizations, upfront PES contracts could be even more cost-effective due to increases in trust, incentives for innovation, and potential market creation for environmentally friendly equipment rental.
The shortcomings of current crop burning reduction practices
In northern India, poor air quality is estimated to reduce life expectancy by six to nine years for half a billion people – one of the world’s largest pollution-related health burdens. An important contributor to this negative environmental externality is smoke from farmers’ fires to clear their fields of crop residue, mainly rice stock, after each harvest.
“Crop residue burning is extremely widespread, not just in India – where millions of farmers do it every year – but also in large parts of East Asia and Southeast Asia,” said Namrata Kala, an associate professor in applied economics at the MIT Sloan School of Management, in an EGC interview. “And if you look at satellite imagery, aggregate residue burning is increasing over time. It's a phenomenon that affects billions of people across the developing world.”
Policymakers have long sought to reduce crop burning and the air pollution it produces. In recent years, the Indian government has adopted a punitive approach: since 2015, burning residue has been banned and punishable by fines. However, implementing penalties across jurisdictions has proved challenging, given that smoke spreads freely, and a powerful farmer lobby has made the ban politically costly to enforce.
Payment for ecosystem services (PES) contracts represent an alternative approach to reducing crop burning. Unlike fines and penalties, they are not politically or logistically challenging to enforce. And unlike equipment subsidies, PES contracts target outputs, with farmers free to choose the inputs to obtain that output.
In a paper forthcoming in the American Economic Review: Insights, Rohini Pande and coauthors Kelsey Jack of U.C. Santa Barbara, Seema Jayachandran of Princeton University, and Namrata Kala analyze the results of an RCT that explored the effects of alternative PES contract designs.
“I’ve always been interested in governance issues around environmental regulation,” said Pande, the Henry J. Heinz II Professor of Economics and Director of the Economic Growth Center. “Crop burning had already been made illegal, but clearly this had proven hard to enforce. I was interested to see how you could use carrots rather than sticks.”
The research team randomized 171 Punjabi villages into three groups: one that was offered standard PES contracts, with payments conditional on ex-post verification that farmers did not practice crop burning; a second that was offered PES contracts where part of the payment was given to farmers upfront and unconditionally, with the remainder disbursed upon verification that burning did not take place; and a control group without PES contracts. For standard contracts, the payout amount was increased from 800 to 1,600 Rupees (around $9 to $20 USD) for some villages to assess the importance of payment amounts, while for upfront PES contracts, the researchers varied whether the upfront payment was 25% or 50% of the total 800 Rupees. To monitor compliance, field staff inspected farmers’ plots, and remote sensing measures were used to monitor control group and non-enrolled treatment group farmers.