PS 20-27 - Work hours and CO2 emissions: Evidence from U.S. households

Tuesday, August 13, 2019
Exhibit Hall, Kentucky International Convention Center
Anders Fremstad, Economics, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, Mark Paul, Economics, Florida State college and Anthony Underwood, Economics, Dickinson College
Background/Question/Methods

The degrowth movement proposes worktime reduction policies to help high-income countries meet their climate goals while supporting full employment. However, the work hours elasticity of carbon emissions remains uncertain despite a growing number of empirical analyses. This paper estimates the impact of work hours on emissions using household data from the United States. We calculate the carbon intensity of goods using input-output tables from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, which we combine with spending data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to estimate carbon footprints for a representative sample of U.S. households.

Results/Conclusions

This paper presents strong evidence that households with longer work hours emit more CO2, but our household-level estimate of the work hours elasticity of carbon emissions is lower than most country-level estimates. Our results suggest that differences in work hours account for a small fraction of differences in per capita carbon footprints across high-income countries.