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Francesco Vona, Giovanni Marin, Davide Consoli, David Popp

This paper provides new evidence on the workplace skills most relevant in the transition toward environmentally sustainable economies. Using a novel data-driven methodology, we identify two main sets of green skills, namely, engineering skills for the design and production of technology, and managerial skills for implementing and monitoring environmental organizational practices. Exploiting exogenous geographical variation in regulatory stringency, we also evaluate the effect of environmental regulation on the demand of green skills for a panel of US metropolitan and non-metropolitan areas over the period 2006–14. The main finding is that while these changes in environmental regulation have no impact on overall employment, they create significant, if modest, gaps in the demand for some green skills, especially those related to technical and engineering work tasks.

Additional data

Year of publication 2018
Journal Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists
DOI https://doi.org/10.1086/698859
Reference Francesco Vona, Giovanni Marin, Davide Consoli, David Popp (), . Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, 5, p. 713