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A closer look at the economic-environmental disparities for regional development in China
Authors:Wen-Min Lu  Shih-Fang Lo
Affiliation:1. Department and Graduate Institute of Finance, National Defense University, No. 70, Sec. 2, Zhongyang North Road, Beitou, Taipei 112, Taiwan;2. International Division, Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research, Rm. 516, 75 Chang-Hsing St., Taipei 106, Taiwan
Abstract:Although China has harvested the fruits of its rapid economic growth over a period of several decades, it has encountered serious environmental problems, an important one being air pollution in the form of soot, dust, and sulfur dioxide. In considering the concept of ‘green-GDP’, this paper analyzes China’s regional development by examining its economic performance while taking into account various environmental factors. In addition to computing technical efficiency for 31 regions in China, a cross-efficiency measure is applied to differentiate the genuine DMUs. ‘Overall’ efficient regions and ‘false positive’ ones are recognized by a false positive index (FPI). It is found that the coastal regions perform on average better than the inland regions both economically and environmentally. For inefficient regions, the benchmark should be those regions with high cross-efficiency mean scores (e.g., Guangdong) rather than those with high self-appraisal scores (e.g., Shanghai). A cross-tabulation illustrating the difference between GDP-oriented performance and Pollution-oriented performance shows that the coastal regions make up the dominant proportion in terms of the benchmarks for economic-environmental optimization.
Keywords:Data envelopment analysis   Cross-efficiency measure   Environment   OR in developing countries
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