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Agglomeration Effects and the Competition for...
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Agglomeration Effects and the Competition for Firms

Abstract

A two-region economy consists of a given but different number of immobile workers in each region, and a given number of mobile firms. Firms create jobs where they locate, but there is frictional unemployment. Two sorts of agglomeration effects arise: those from economies of scale in matching, and those from production economies external to the firm. Regions may either be part of a unitary state in which case all regional policies are decided by the central government, or they may be part of a federal state in which case some policies are determined by the regional governments. We characterize the resource allocations in both a unitary and a federal state, and identify the set of instruments that are required to replicate the social optimum in each state.

Authors

Boadway R; Cuff K; Marceau N

Publication date

January 1, 2003

DOI

10.2139/ssrn.413100

Preprint server

SSRN Electronic Journal

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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