Why might one expect environmental Kuznets curves? Examining the desirability and feasibility of substitution Talikoff Alexander Strickland Pfaff author Columbia University. Earth Institute Columbia University. Economics Columbia University. International and Public Affairs Chaudhuri Shubham author Columbia University. Economics Nye Howard L. M. author Columbia University. Economics Columbia University. Economics contributor originator text Working papers New York Department of Economics, Columbia University 2002 This paper provides simple, transparent intuition for the perhaps surprising and certainly widely debated empirical findings of "environmental Kuznets curves", i.e. U-shaped relationships between per-capita income and indicators of environmental quality. We consider one possible component of such relationships: the linkage between income and household choices that impact upon the environment. Our explicit model emphasizes two features. First, degradation of the environmental endowment is a by-product of household activities. We present a household production model in which consumption of marketed commodities generates both a "good", desired non-environmental services, and a "bad", degradation of the environment. Second, while households can not directly purchase environmental quality, they can reorganize their activities so less degradation results. If environmental quality is a normal good, one expects substitution towards less degrading commodities, so that increases in income will increase environmental quality. We show that natural constraints on the desirability and feasibility of such substitution can produce non-monotonic relationships between household income and environmental quality, and in particular can produce household-level environmental Kuznets curves. Economic theory Department of Economics Discussion Papers 0102-45 http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:374 English NNC NNC 2011-03-23 09:32:10 -0400 2011-06-21 12:28:50 -0400 3183 eng