Title: The policy implications of geographical economics
1Chapter 11
- The policy implications of geographical economics
2Issues
- government taxation and spending
- infrastructure and transport costs
- welfare implications
- p459 largely based on the core model for
simplicity - p461 "policy is typically not analyzed within
the context of geographical economics"
3Six basic policy implications Ottaviano (2003)
- regional side effects
- non-regional policy has regional implications
(fuel tax?) - trade interaction effects
- initial level of trade and agglomeration relevant
- lock-in effects
- temporary policies may have permanent effects
- start policy from one stable equilibrium to
another - end policy no return to former situation
- selection effects
- going from spreading beyond breakpoint f gt fB any
(small) policy can trigger a selection going to
full agglomeration to 1 or 2 - coordination effects
- policy can influence expectations when more
equilibria are - possible fS gt f gt fB
- people go where they expect others will go
- Threshold effects
- marginal policy is ineffective unless some
sustain- or breakpoint is reached/passed
4Figure 11.1 The Tomahawk diagram
fs
1
1
l
l
1
1
0.5
0.5
0
0
fs
0
0
Free
-
ness of trade
Free
-
ness of trade f
Sustain points
Stable equilibria
Sustain points
Stable equilibria
Break point
Unstable equilibria
Break point
Unstable equilibria
Basin of attraction for spreading equilibrium
Basin of attraction for spreading equilibrium
Basin of attraction for agglomeration in region 1
Basin of attraction for agglomeration in region 1
Basin of attraction for agglomeration in region 2
Basin of attraction for agglomeration in region 2
5Critics (more in Ch 12)
- unrealistic suggestion that politicians can
"choose" an equilibrium and know how to get there - unproven transfer of two-region model conclusions
to multiregional models - strong bias of "bang-bang" behaviour in the
two-region model - multiregional model behaves more moderate -gt less
"catastrophic" agglomeration
6Urban Herfindahl Index for a line with increasing
size
line-size stability a minimum of 30 regions
seems necessary
7Urban Herfindahl Index for a square grid with
increasing size
square-size stability a minimum of 100 regions
seems necessary
8Government taxation and spending
- standard view increased capital mobility reduces
tax burden on capital - "race to the bottom"
- Baldwin Forslid (2002) not if tax revenues are
spent on public goods that benefit the mobile
production factor - Baldwin Krugman (2004) agglomeration rent can
offset higher taxes (see the Wiggle diagram, fig
11.3) - in general for the mobile factor
- taxes stimulate spreading
- spending stimulates agglomeration
9Figure 11.2 Effective average tax rate and Golub
index (barriers to FDI)
10Figure 11.2 Effective average tax rate and Golub
index (barriers to FDI)
11Figure 11.3 The Wiggle Diagram
r
/r
r
/r
N
S
N
S
(iii) standard tax competition
(iii) standard tax competition
(ii) geo ec. high trade costs
(ii) geo ec. high trade costs
D
D
B
B
t
-
t
t
-
t
N
S
N
S
A
A
0
1
C
0
1
C
share of firms in North
(i) geo ec. intermediate trade costs
(i) geo ec. intermediate trade costs
12Box 11.2 International transfers
- can be simply modelled by some exogenous change
of ? ?1, ?2, ... , ?n - may or may not have permanent effects after
ending (shift of equilibriuim or return to old
equilibrium) - as always in geographical economics effects
depends on the inital distribution (history) and
phase of integration (transport costs) - see figure 11.5
13Figure 11.5 Change in real wage rate of bystander
(intermediate transport costs)
14Baldwin Krugman (2004)
- use the Forslid Ottaviano model of 4.8 extended
with government spending - production function becomes
- fj (Zj) rj ß xj
- (parameter normalization ß 1-1/e or ß (e
-1)/e - in the book equation 11.1 mentions s in stead of
e) - f is efficiency function for government good Z
- f (0) 1 f' lt0
- competition of human capital resources between K
and Z nj (Kj - Zj) / fj (zj) - Z reduces n fig 11.6 more agglomeration
tendency
154
e
3
Figure 11.6 Marginal impact of introducing public
goods on break-point
2
1
0
0
1
0
d
16Infrastructure
- changing Drs -gt changing TDrs
- example section 11.4 change a neutral geography
without history into a non-neutral geography - assignment changing a non-neutral geography
with history
17Figure 11.7 The pancake economy
18Figure 11.8 Impact of building a bridge on
spatial distribution
19Figure 11.9 Impact of transport costs bridge
between 4 and 10
20Welfare implications
- simple definition ?j yj with real income
yYI-d
Link 2-12 link 3-11 link 4-10
average change in real income () 0.9 1.9 2.2
average change in real farm income () -0.3 0.2 0.2
average change in real manufacturing income () 1.6 2.8 3.5
21Figure 11.10 Real income and welfare changes
link 4-10
22Figure 11.10 Real income and welfare changes
link 4-10
23Figure 11.10 Real income and welfare changes
link 4-10
24 Chapter 12
25- GE can be thought of as an attempt to unify
international and regional economics (Ohlin,
1933) - Comments from
- Regional and urban economics
- International economics
- Economic geography
26Nijkamp (2000)
- Critics from regional/urban economics
- Neglect of work by forerunners
- Too narrow view on geography with iceberg
transport costs - No attention to spatial competition between
firms, no well developed theory of the firm - No attention for the role of institutions
- Rely heavily on simulations, poor empirical basis
27Neary (2001)
- Critics from international economics
- No strategic interaction between firms
- To simple transport costs and too simple
(one-dimensional) geographies - Reliance of specific functional forms and
simulations - Lack of empirical evidence
28Comment from geography
- Outright rejection
- Interested critics (Martin/Storper)
- Serious gap between GE and EG Storper(2003)
- Economists are the kings and queens of generality
(deductive/ theoretical/analytical) - Geographers are the kings and queens of
specificity and particularity (inductive/empirical
/descriptive) - See also Box 12.2 and Appendix NEG versus PEG
29Martin (1999)
- Critics from geography
- Neglect in GE of more recent work
- General equilibrium framework unable to deal with
the role of institutions - NEG is neither new (just a restatement of
outdated earlier insights of EG) nor geographical
because there is no place for real-world
geography - Spatial policy is far to complex for the simple
NEG framework
30Evaluation of critics
- yes / no longer / no
- Reliance on simulations remains a problem
- Iceberg specification too simple
- More complex and less simple models have evolved
recently - More empirical content on the way
- Real novelty 1) in the way it tackles the
relation between econoics and geography 2)
agglomeration is an outcome of the model
31Future directions
- integration with growth theory
- spatial scales
- differentiated sectors
- "richer menu" of agglomeration and spreading
forces - as in other fields no "one size fits all"
- other functional forms
- more empirical content