Working PaperFirst publicationPublished version DOI: 10.48548/pubdata-1264

Governmental activity, integration, and agglomeration

Preview & Downloads

Chronological data

Date of first publication2007-08-20
Date of publication in PubData 2024-08-23

Language of the resource

English

Related external resources

Part of ISSN: 1860-5508
Working paper series in economics

Related PubData resources

Publisher

Other contributors

Abstract

This paper analyzes, within a regional growth model, the impact of productive governmental policy and integration on the spatial distribution of economic activity. Integration is understood as enhancing territorial cooperation between the regions, and it describes the extent to which one region may benefit from the other region’s public input, e.g. the extent to which regional road networks are connected. Both integration and the characteristics of the public input crucially affect whether agglomeration arises and if so to which extent economic activity is concentrated: As a consequence of enhanced integration, agglomeration is less likely to arise and concentration will be lower. Relative congestion reinforces agglomeration, thereby increasing equilibrium concentration. Due to the congestion externalities, the market outcome ends up in suboptimally high concentration.

Keywords

Public Input; Agglomeration; Integration; Integration; Ballungsraum; Staatstätigkeit; Ökonomie

Number of the series contribution

57

Faculty / department

More information

DDC

330 :: Wirtschaft

Creation Context

Research