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Asymmetric link between environmental pollution and COVID-19 in the top ten affected states of US: A novel estimations from quantile-on-quantile approach

Razzaq A. School of Management & Economics, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China|
Jermsittiparsert K. Beijing Key Laboratory of New Energy and Low Carbon, Development, School of Economics and Management, Electric Power University, North China, Beijing, 102206, China| Irfan M. Northwest A& F University, Shaanxi, China| Aziz N. Department of Business Administration, Eman Institute of Management & Sciences, Karachi, Pakistan| Sharif A. Othman Yeop Abdullah Graduate School of Business, Universiti Utara Malaysia, Sintok, Malaysia|

Environmental Research Số , năm 2020 (Tập 191, trang -)

DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110189

Tài liệu thuộc danh mục: ISI, Scopus

English

English

Từ khóa: ozone; asymmetry; atmospheric pollution; environmental fate; estimation method; health impact; pollution effect; air pollution; air quality; Arizona; Article; chronic disease; coronavirus disease 2019; fallout; Georgia (U.S.); human; Illinois; major clinical study; Massachusetts; New Jersey; New York; Pennsylvania; priority journal; Texas; United States; Arizona; Georgia; Illinois; Massachusetts; New Jersey; New York [United States]; Pennsylvania; Texas; United States
Tóm tắt tiếng anh
This study draws the link between COVID-19 and air pollution (ground ozone O3) from February 29, 2020 to July 10, 2020 in the top 10 affected States of the US. Utilizing quantile-on-quantile (QQ) estimation technique, we examine in what manner the quantiles of COVID-19 affect the quantiles of air pollution and vice versa. The primary findings confirm overall dependence between COVID-19 and air pollution. Empirical results exhibit a strong negative effect of COVID-19 on air pollution in New York, Texas, Illinois, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania; especially at medium to higher quantiles, while New Jersey, Illinois, Arizona, and Georgia show strong negative effect mainly at lower quantiles. Contrarily, COVID-19 positively affects air pollution in Pennsylvania at extreme lower quantiles. On the other side, air pollution predominantly caused to increase in the intensity of COVID-19 cases across all states except lower quantiles of Massachusetts, and extreme higher quantiles of Arizona and New Jersey, where this effect becomes less pronounced or negative. Concludingly, a rare positive fallout of COVID-19 is reducing environmental pressure, while higher environmental pollution causes to increase the vulnerability of COVID-19 cases. These findings imply that air pollution is at the heart of chronic diseases, therefore the state government should consider these asymmetric channels and introduce appropriate policy measures to reset and control atmospheric emissions. � 2020 Elsevier Inc.

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