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Agglomeration economies, taxable rents, and government capture: evidence from a place-based policy

Marius Brülhart

Papers from World Trade Institute

Abstract: We study how industry-level agglomeration economies affect government policy. Using administrative data on firm subsidies in economically lagging regions of Great Britain, we test two alternative hypotheses. Economic geography models imply that firms at an industry’s core can sustain higher tax burdens or require lower subsidies than firms in more remote locations. Conversely, political economy models predict firms at the industry’s core to be more successful at lobbying government, particularly at the sub-national level, thus obtaining more favourable fiscal treatment. We find that local government agencies structure subsidy offers to favour pre-existing employment in locally agglomerated industries, behaviour more in line with theories of policy capture than with economic geography models.

Date: 2014-12-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-geo, nep-pol and nep-ure
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Related works:
Journal Article: Agglomeration economies, taxable rents and government capture: evidence from a place-based policy (2018) Downloads
Working Paper: Agglomeration Economies, Taxable Rents, And Government Capture: Evidence From A Place-Based Policy (2015) Downloads
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