Does ranking stimulate government performance? Evidence from China’s key environmental protection cities

被引:0
|
作者
Lei Liu
Zhaotian Yang
Suqin Song
机构
[1] Sichuan University,School of Public Administration
来源
Social Indicators Research | 2021年 / 158卷
关键词
Ranking; Air quality; Local government;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
With the air quality ranking of China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environment as a case, this paper examines whether the public ranking could stimulate the ranked cities to improve performance. The results show that the horizontal ranking, i.e., the relative position among the cities, significantly stimulates the cities to improve air quality. The stimulating effect is significant for all the three type of cities, i.e., cities with good, medium and poor air quality, and is the strongest for the cities with good air quality. However, the stimulating effect for air quality improvement is not enough to alter the air quality comparison among the cities. Compared to other cities, if a city is ranked relatively low in the last year, the air quality in the current year is still relatively poor. The inertia is particularly significant for the cities with poor air quality. The vertical ranking, i.e., if the rank of a city progresses or retrogresses, does not affect the air quality and air quality change of the city. Overall, public ranking is argued to stimulate performance improvement by seducing the competition among local governments, although the actual effect is still subject to the perception of local governments and their capacity to respond to the ranking.
引用
收藏
页码:699 / 725
页数:26
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [31] Do marginal abatement costs matter for improving air quality? Evidence from China?s major cities
    Ji, D. J.
    Zhou, P.
    Wu, F.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2021, 286
  • [32] Information, incentives, and environmental governance: Evidence from China's ambient air quality standards
    Li, Pei
    Lu, Yi
    Peng, Lu
    Wang, Jin
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT, 2024, 128
  • [33] Does limited decentralization of environmental enforcement power improve air quality? Quasi-experimental evidence from China
    Tang, Yu
    Mao, Yijie
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2023, 412
  • [34] Political connections buffer and local environmental performance deterioration: evidence from spring model and empirical data in China
    Yao, Sheng
    Liang, Haotian
    ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS, 2018, 25 (05) : 607 - 623
  • [35] Performance management implementation challenges in Ghana's local government system Evidence from the Sefwi Wiawso Municipal Assembly
    Ahenkan, Albert
    Tenakwah, Emmanuel Senior
    Bawole, Justice Nyigmah
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTIVITY AND PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT, 2018, 67 (03) : 519 - 535
  • [36] The effect of environmental regulation on population migration: Evidence from China's new ambient air quality standards
    Li, Baoxi
    Gui, Tiantian
    Chen, Guo
    Cheng, Shixiong
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2023, 415
  • [37] Can campaign-style enforcement facilitate water pollution control? Learning from China's Environmental Protection Interview
    Pan, Dan
    Hong, Wei
    He, Mimi
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2022, 301
  • [38] Does energy transition improve air quality? Evidence derived from China's Winter Clean Heating Pilot (WCHP) project
    Zhang, Yali
    Li, Wenqi
    Wu, Feng
    ENERGY, 2020, 206
  • [39] Assessments of Air Pollution Control Effectiveness Based on a Sharp Regression Discontinuity Design -Evidence From China's Environmental Big Data
    Wang, Ren
    Huang, Jiaqi
    Zhang, Lizhi
    Xia, Yu
    Xu, Xu
    Nong, Tongli
    FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2021, 9
  • [40] Can target-based environmental regulations effectively improve city air quality? Evidence from China's total emissions control policy
    Gao, Yanyan
    Huang, Jianbo
    JOURNAL OF THE ASIA PACIFIC ECONOMY, 2024, : 712 - 735