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Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental Protection and Industrial Location

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TLDR
This article examined whether traditional factors such as markets, labor, and materials remain predominant in manufacturing-location decision making, despite the recently added dimension of environmental regulations, and found that environmental regulations have no consistent effect on the size of new branch plants of large U.S. corporations.
Abstract
The National Environmental Policy Act and the pollution control powers of environmental protection agencies present a potentially significant new influence on the location of economic activity within the United States. This study examines whether traditional factors such as markets, labor, and materials remain predominant in manufacturing-location decision making, despite the recently added dimension of environmental regulations. Personal interviews and mailed questionnaires were used to identify the factors that were most important in the location of 162 new branch plants of large U.S. corporations. For most of the locational decisions investigated, environmental regulations did not rank among the most important factors considered; when such regulations were of some significance, uncertainties about when the necessary permits would be obtained were more important than spatial variations in direct costs. The results indicate that environmental regulations have had no consistent effect on the size...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental regulations and manufacturers' location choices: Evidence from the Census of Manufactures

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the relationship between site choice and environmental regulations using a broad range of industries and measures of stringency and found that state environmental regulations do not systematically affect the location choices of most manufacturing plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Examining the Evidence on Environmental Regulations and Industry Location

TL;DR: A review and critique of the large literature on the pollution havens hypothesis can be found in this article, which refers to the notion that certain jurisdictions can become pollution havens as dirty industries relocate or expand in response to differences in regulatory stringency.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Environmental Regulation on Business Location in the United States

TL;DR: The authors empirically examined whether variations in state environmental regulations have affected the location of manufacturing branch plants by the Fortune 500 companies and found no statistically significant effects of environmental regulation on business location.
Journal Article

Who bears the burdens of environmental pollution? Race, ethnicity, and environmental equity in Florida

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the localisation of industries toxiques and cela par rapport au profil ethnique, socio-economic, des populations dans les regions ou elles sont installees.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interviewing business owners and managers: a review of methods and techniques

TL;DR: A survey of the interview methods used by Anglo-American economic geographers in order to review the methods and techniques of interviewing can be found in this article, where the authors argue that there is no one "best" way of interviewing business owners and managers.
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Book ChapterDOI

The Conservation Foundation

Book

Impact of uncertainty on location

TL;DR: The impact of uncertainty on location patterns has been studied in a wide range of areas, such as the effect of duopolists, the patterns of towns, the production decisions of firms and the impact of widespread innovations on location as mentioned in this paper.