煤炭衰退的金丝雀:阿巴拉契亚家庭财务和从化石燃料过渡

Joshua A. Blonz, Brigitte Roth Tran, Erin Troland
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摘要

远离化石燃料的能源转型给历史上围绕化石燃料行业建立的社区带来了重大的转型风险。本文利用2011年至2018年阿巴拉契亚煤炭工业的衰落来了解当地化石燃料开采活动减少对个人的伤害。我们使用个人信用数据和电力部门煤炭需求的外生变化来确定煤炭开采行业的衰退如何影响阿巴拉契亚家庭的财务状况。我们发现,煤炭需求的下降造成了广泛的负面影响,信用评分下降,信用利用率上升,违约率上升,第三方催收金额上升,破产率上升,次贷个人数量上升。这些影响是广泛的,不能仅仅用失去煤矿工作的个人来解释。前期信用评分最低的个人更有可能陷入财务困境,信用评分也会恶化得更厉害。分位数回归显示,在信用评分分布的第30和第50个百分位数之间,煤炭价格下跌导致的信用评分下降最为明显。我们的研究结果提供了证据,表明生活在化石燃料开采地区的人们,即使他们不直接在受影响的行业工作,也可能会因能源转型而经历经济福祉的下降。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Canary in the Coal Decline: Appalachian Household Finance and the Transition from Fossil Fuels
The energy transition away from fossil fuels presents significant transition risks for communities historically built around the fossil fuel industry. This paper uses the decline in the Appalachian coal industry between 2011 and 2018 to understand how individuals are harmed by a reduction in local fossil fuel extraction activity. We use individual-level credit data and exogenous variation in coal demand from the electricity sector to identify how the coal mining industry’s decline affected the finances of Appalachian households. We find that the decline in demand for coal caused broad-based negative impacts, decreasing credit scores and increasing credit utilization, delinquencies, amounts in third party collections, bankruptcy rates, and the number of individuals with subprime status. These effects were broad based and cannot be explained solely by individuals who lost coal mining jobs. Individuals with the lowest pre-period credit scores were more likely to end up in financial distress and experienced a greater deterioration in credit scores. Quantile regressions show that the drop in credit scores from the coal decline was most pronounced between the 30th and 50th percentiles of the credit score distribution. Our results provide evidence that people living in fossil fuel extraction regions are likely to experience declines in financial well-being from the energy transition even if they do not directly work in the affected industry.
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