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Sie sind hier: FRIAS Fellows Fellows 2023/24 Prof. Dietrich Earnhart

Prof. Dietrich Earnhart

University of Kansas
Economics

External Senior Fellow
Juni 2021

CV

Professional Preparation:

Yale University         New Haven, CT     Economics/Political Science     B.A., 1987

                                                                              Summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa

Univ. of Wisconsin – Madison, WI          Economics                                  M.S., 1991

Univ. of Wisconsin – Madison, WI          Economics                                  Ph.D., 1995

 

Appointments:

2017 – present       Director, Undergraduate Studies Program, Department of Economics, University of Kansas

2009 – present       Full Professor, University of Kansas

2012 – present       Research Associate, Center for Economic Research and Graduate Education  – Economics Institute (CERGE-EI), Charles University – Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic

2002 – 2009          Associate Professor, University of Kansas

2002 – present       Director, Center for Environmental Policy, Institute for Policy and Social Research, University of Kansas

1999 – 2003          Research Fellow, William Davidson Institute (at University of Michigan)

1999 – 2003          Research Affiliate, Centre for Economic Policy Research

1997 – 2002          Assistant Professor, University of Kansas

1995 – 1997          Assistant Professor, Fairfield University

Publiktionen (Auswahl)

  • “Effect of Cooperative Enforcement Strategies on Wastewater Management,” Economic Inquiry, 56 (2) [April], pg. 1357-1379, 2018 (with Zach Raff).

  • “Corporate Environmental Strategies in Developing and Transition Economies,” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 8 (2), pg. 164-185, 2014 (with Madhu Khanna and Thomas Lyon).

  • “Effect of Audits on the Extent of Compliance with Wastewater Discharge Limits,” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 68 (2), pg. 243-261, 2014 (with Donna Ramirez Harrington).

  • “‘Effective Regulatory Stringency’ and Firms’ Profitability: The Effects of Effluent Limits and Government Monitoring,” Journal of Regulatory Economics, 50 (2), pg. 111-145, 2016 (with Dylan Rassier).

  • “The Role of Regulated Facilities’ Perceptions of the Effectiveness of Regulatory Monitoring and Enforcement: Compliance with the Clean Water Act,” Ecological Economics, 142, pg. 282-294, 2017 (with Lana Friesen).

FRIAS Projekt

Information-Based Environmental Regulation: Testing the Porter Hypothesis

This FRIAS project explores the effect of information-based environmental regulation, which requires companies to record and publicly report their pollutant emissions, on companies’ financial outcomes, e.g,. profits. Specifically, the project derives theoretically hypotheses specific to information-based regulation, drawing upon standard economic theory, which posits that any environmental regulation undermines financial outcomes, and the Porter Theory, which posits that environmental regulation may improve financial outcomes. The project then tests empirically these hypotheses in the context of European Pollutant Release and Transfer Register (E-PRTR) regulation using data on German manufacturing facilities. These data are available from the Mannheim Innovation Panel (MIP) database, which is housed at the Center for European Economic Research [Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung (ZEW)]. For this project, the applicant is collaborating with research scientists at ZEW: Dr. Robert Germeshausen and Dr. Kathrine von Graevenitz.