Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 33122
EU, US and Tax Incentives: An Application
Authors: Carlos F. Liard-Muriente
Abstract:
The purpose of this paper is to shed light on the controversial subject of tax incentives to promote regional development. Although extensive research has been conducted, a review of the literature gives an inconclusive answer to whether economic incentives are effective. One reason is the fact that for some researchers “effective" means the significant location of new firms in targeted areas, while for others the creation of jobs regardless if new firms are arriving in a significant fashion. We present this dichotomy by analyzing a tax incentive program via both alternatives: location and job creation. The contribution of the paper is to inform policymakers about the potential opportunities and pitfalls when designing incentive strategies. This is particularly relevant, given that both the US and Europe have been promoting incentives as a tool for regional economic development.Keywords: Employment, Foreign Investment, Tax Incentives.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1332100
Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 1411References:
[1] R. W. Wassmer, "Can Local Incentives Alter a Metropolitan City-s Economic Development?", Urban Studies, 31, pp. 1251-78, 1994.
[2] R. Altshuler; H. Grubert, and T.S. Newlon, "Has U.S. Investment Abroad Become More Sensitive to Tax Rates?" in International Taxation and Multinational Activity, NBER Report series, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001, pp. 9-32.
[3] T. J. Bartik, Who Benefits from State and Local Economic Development Policies?, W.E. UPJOHN Institute for Employment Research. Kalamazoo, Michigan, 1991.
[4] B.M. Rubin, Barry M., and M.G. Wilder, "Urban Enterprise Zones: Employment Impacts and Fiscal Incentives," American Planning Association Journal, Vol. 55, pp. 418-31, 1989.
[5] L.E. Papke, "Tax Policy and Urban Development: Evidence from the Indiana Enterprise Zone Program," Journal of Public Economics, Vol. 54, pp. 37-49, 1994.
[6] Sweet (1999) M.L. Sweet, Regional Economic Development in the European Union and North, America Preager Publishers, 1999.
[7] Thomas (2000) K.P. Thomas, Competing for Capital: Europe and North America in a Global Era, Georgetown University Press 2000.
[8] N. Phelps, Nicholas, and M. Tewdwr-Jones, Mark, "Globalisation, Regions and the State: Exploring the limitation of Economic Modernisation through Inward Investment," Urban Studies, Vol. 38, pp. 1253-1272, 2001.
[9] B. Bilbao-Osorio, Be├▒at, and A. Rodriguez-Pose, "From R&D to Innovation and Economic Growth in the EU," Growth and Change, Vol. 35, pp. 434-455, 2004.
[10] G.L. Clark; T. Palaskas, P. Tracey; M. Tsampra, "Globalization and Competitive Strategy in Europe's Vulnerable Regions: Firm, Industry and Country Effects in Labour-Intensive Industries," Regional Studies, Vol. 38, pp. 1085-1100, 2004.
[11] K.P. Thomas, Competing for Capital: Europe and North America in a Global Era, Georgetown University Press, 2000.
[12] M. C. Guisan, and E. Aguayo, "Desarrollo Econ├│mico De Europa Central en 1950-2002: Modelos Econométricos y Comparaci├│n con Irlanda, Espa├▒a Y Austria," Estudios Econ├│micos de Desarrollo Internacional, Vol. 4, pp. 49-72, 2005.
[13] U. Broll; S. Marjit; J.E. Wahl, "Regional Policy, Integration and the Distribution of Foreign Investment," Review of Regional Research, Vol. 25, pp. 107-112, 2005.
[14] H. S. Perloff; E. S. Dunn; E. Lampard, and R. Muth, Regions, Resources and Economic Growth. University of Nebraska Press, 1960.
[15] H. S. Perloff, How a region grows; area development in the U.S., Committee for Economic Development, New York, 1963.
[16] E. Dunn, Recent Economic Development as Revealed by the Changing Structure of Employment, University of Florida Press, 1962.
[17] V. Fuchs, Changes in the Location of Manufacturing in the United States since 1929, Yale University Press, 1962.
[18] L. Ashby, "The Geographical Redistribution of Employment: An Examination of the Elements of Change," Survey of Current Business, Vol. 44, pp. 13-20, 1964.
[19] C. C. Coughlin, and P. S. Pollard, "Comparing Manufacturing Export Growth across States: What Accounts for the Differences?" Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, Vol. 83, pp.25-40, 2001.
[20] J. Esteban, "Regional Convergence in Europe and the Industry Mix: A Shift Share Analysis," Regional Science & Urban Economics, Vol. 30, pp. 353-64, 2000.
[21] R. Q. Hanham, and S. Banasick, "Shift-Share Analysis and Changes in Japanese Manufacturing Employment," Growth & Change, Vol. 31, pp. 108-23.
[22] D. W. Carlton, "Why Do New Firms Locate Where They Do: An Econometric Model", in W. Wheaton, ed., Interregional Movements and Regional Growth, The Urban Institute, Washington, D.C., pp. 13-50, 1979.
[23] D.W. Carlton, "Location and Employment Choices of New Forms: An Econometric Model with Discrete and Continuous Endogenous Variables," The Review of Economics and Statistics, Vol. 65, pp. 440- 49, 1983.
[24] D. McFadden, "Conditional Logit Analysis of Qualitative Choice Behavior," in P. Zarembka ed., Frontiers in Econometrics, Academic Press, New York, pp. 105-142, 1974.
[25] W. H. Greene, Econometric Analysis, Prentice Hall, 2003.
[26] A. D. Barbour; L. Holst, and S. Janson, Poisson Approximation, Oxford University Press, 1992.
[27] W. Baumol, and E. Wolff, "Catching Up in the Postwar Period: Puerto Rico as the Fifth ATiger@?," World Development, Vol. 24, pp. 869-885, 1996.
[28] P. Guimaraes; R. J. Rolfe, and D.P. Woodward, "Regional Incentives and Location in Puerto Rico," International Regional Science Review, Vol. 21, pp. 119-38, 1998.
[29] H. Grubert, and J. Slemrod, "The Effect of Taxes on Investment and Income Shifting to Puerto Rico," The Review of Economics and Statistics, Vol. 80, No. 3, pp. 365-373, 1998.
[30] Liard-Muriente C. F. Liard-Muriente, "Expanding Employment by Attracting FDI," in Proc. 34th Annual Conference of the Northeast Business & Economics Association, New York, 2007, pp.37-53.
[31] R. R. Nelson, "State Labor Legislation Enacted in 2000," Monthly Labor Review, Vol. 124, pp.12-24, 2001.
[32] A. B. Krueger, "The Effect of the Minimum Wage When It Really Bites: A Re-examination of the Evidence from Puerto Rico," Research in Labor Economics, Vol.14, pp. 1-22, 1995.
[33] A. J. Castillo-Freeman, and R. B. Freeman, When the Minimum Wage Really Bites: The Effect of the U.S. Level Minimum on Puerto Rico, in: Immigration and the Work Force: Economic Consequences for the United States and Source Areas, National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 177-211, 1992.
[34] C. E Santiago, "Closing the Gap: The Employment and Unemployment Effects of Minimum Wage Policy in Puerto Rico," Journal of Development Economics, Vol. 23, pp. 293-311, 1986.
[35] D. Rodrick, Has Globalization gone too Far? Institute for International Economics, Washington D.C., 1997.
[36] C. F. Liard-Muriente, "Globalization and Inequality: Some Remarks," Equal Opportunities International, Vol. 24, pp. 24-37, 2005.