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Pollution and Mortality: Evidence from early 20th Century Sweden

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  • Michael Haylock
  • Martin Karlsson
  • Maksym Obrizan

Abstract

Economic growth in Sweden during the early 20th Century was largely driven by industry. A significant contributor to this growth was the installation of different kinds of engines used to power factories. We use newly digitized data on engines and their energy source by industry sector, and combine this with municipality-level data of workers per industry sector to construct a new variable reflecting economic output using dirty engines. In turn, we assess the average externality of dirty output on mortality in the short-run, as defined by deaths over the population in the baseline year. Our results show substantial increases of up to 17% higher mortality in cities where large increases to dirty engine installations occurred, which is largely driven by the elderly. We also run a placebo test using clean powered industry and find no effect on mortality.

Suggested Citation

  • Michael Haylock & Martin Karlsson & Maksym Obrizan, 2024. "Pollution and Mortality: Evidence from early 20th Century Sweden," Papers 2412.01532, arXiv.org, revised Dec 2024.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2412.01532
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    References listed on IDEAS

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