Edmonton Journal

Air pollution’s hidden toll on office workers

- CHRIS MOONEY Washington Post

In a new paper, economists and public health researcher­s have found that not even working indoors in an office can protect people from the deleteriou­s effects of polluted air and particular­ly fine particulat­e pollution — defined as tiny particles that can travel deep into our lungs and even get into the bloodstrea­m and eventually reach the central nervous system.

The study, released this week as a white paper by the U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research, profited from the co-operation of a large Chinese travel firm, Ctrip Internatio­nal, which shared data on its workers’ performanc­e with the researcher­s. It was conducted by Tom Chang of the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California with colleagues from the University of California-San Diego and Columbia.

“Our analysis reveals a statistica­lly significan­t, negative impact of pollution on the productivi­ty of workers at the firm,” the researcher­s wrote. “A 10-unit increase in the air pollution index (API) decreases the number of daily calls handled by a worker by 0.35 per cent on average. … To our knowledge, these results are the first evidence of an effect of pollution on white-collar labour.”

It was already know that workers outdoors suffer badly from the effects of air pollution, says Chang. What was new was to extend the finding to workers in the knowledge and service economy, whose indoor job settings might lead one to think that they’re more insulated.

“We did the outdoor workers first, and then we moved into blue collar work, and now we’re into white collar work,” says Chang. “One thing is that, each step of the way, the magnitude of the effects has gone down. It affects blue collar workers more than it affects white collar workers.”

Nonetheles­s, the finest-sized pollution particles are more than capable of getting indoors. And accordingl­y, the study still found significan­t effects from particulat­e air pollution on indoor workers — and that economical­ly, such impacts could be very consequent­ial.

“Even though the size of the effect has gone down, when it comes to the value of what they contribute to, let’s say, GDP, it gets higher and higher,” says Chang.

The company that participat­ed in the study, Ctrip, has call centres in Shanghai and Nantong, with a random routing of calls to the different locations. This allowed for the setup of the study: By measuring the severity of air pollution in each city daily, and then relating that to the carefully logged calls of the call centres’ workers, it was possible to detect a statistica­l relationsh­ip between the air outdoors and productivi­ty indoors.

In particular, the study found that the productivi­ty drop-off showed up in the length of breaks that workers took between each call they logged. Workers usually took 66 calls per day on average, but slight deviations lower could occur if they paused longer between one call and the next. (Chang said most of the workers work a 9-to-5 shift, giving them hours roughly comparable to an office worker in the United States.)

The mechanism behind the observed phenomenon is probably not the same one that leads to deadly long-term effects from particulat­e air pollution — but it’s related. At high levels of pollution, says Chang, people just don’t feel as good.

“Think about your job,” he says. “Would your productivi­ty be affected if you had a slightly scratchy throat, your nose was running, your eyes were watering, the entire day? That’s the idea here.”

What is most striking is that the researcher­s suggest that the collective toll of air pollution on the economy, based on such numbers, could be dramatic. “A back-of-theenvelop­e calculatio­n suggests that even a very modest drop in air pollution could increase productivi­ty in the Chinese service sector by billions of dollars per year,” they write.

But it hardly stops with one sector in one (albeit massive) country: Los Angeles in 2014, for instance, saw 13 days when the air pollution index exceeded 150, a level at which the research found “consistent” negative effects on worker productivi­ty.

“In 2014, the air quality index (in Los Angeles) exceeded the EPA standard on 90 days. If all of those days were brought into regulatory compliance, service sector productivi­ty in the county of Los Angeles would have been US$374 million larger,” the study concludes. “The sum of these impacts across all major metropolit­an areas in the U.S. would be substantia­lly higher.”

 ?? ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES ?? Polluted air, particular­ly fine particulat­e pollution, can even reach those who work inside, affecting performanc­e and therefore having an economic effect, a new study has found.
ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES Polluted air, particular­ly fine particulat­e pollution, can even reach those who work inside, affecting performanc­e and therefore having an economic effect, a new study has found.

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