Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Fiscal Decentralization: Benefits and Problems
- 2 Locational Efficiency and Efficiency-Supporting Tax Systems
- 3 Perfect Interregional Competition
- 4 Interregional Tax Competition for Mobile Capital
- 5 Optimal Structure of Local Governments
- 6 Incentive Equivalence through Perfect Household Mobility
- 7 Efficiency and the Degree of Household Mobility
- 8 Decentralized Redistribution Policy
- 9 Decentralization and Intergenerational Problems
- 10 Informational Asymmetry between the Regions and the Center
- 11 Conclusions
- References
- Index
11 - Conclusions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Fiscal Decentralization: Benefits and Problems
- 2 Locational Efficiency and Efficiency-Supporting Tax Systems
- 3 Perfect Interregional Competition
- 4 Interregional Tax Competition for Mobile Capital
- 5 Optimal Structure of Local Governments
- 6 Incentive Equivalence through Perfect Household Mobility
- 7 Efficiency and the Degree of Household Mobility
- 8 Decentralized Redistribution Policy
- 9 Decentralization and Intergenerational Problems
- 10 Informational Asymmetry between the Regions and the Center
- 11 Conclusions
- References
- Index
Summary
The basic objective of this study has been to analyze whether the allocative and the redistributive functions of the government can be assigned to the regions of a federal state. This concluding chapter tries to give a comprehensive answer to that question and intends to derive the most important policy applications of the analysis in this book. Section 11.1 first turns to the allocative branch of the government, Section 11.2 proceeds with its redistributive function, and Section 11.3 finally draws the policy conclusions.
Efficiency and Decentralization
This section aims to reconsider the conditions ensuring that decentralized government decisions result in an efficient allocation if the individual regions of a federal state are connected by a high degree of interregional mobility. It thereby assumes that governments are not self-serving.
The first important condition is that regions must have a sufficiently flexible instrument set available to achieve an efficient allocation. Mobile firms and households cause crowding costs at their location. Regions must therefore be able to collect direct location-based taxes on mobile firms and households in order to internalize these costs. Without such location-based taxes, it is impossible to ensure the efficient locational pattern across regions, in general. Since, however, marginal crowding costs are generally lower than average costs of providing local public goods and factors, the availability of direct firm and household taxes is not sufficient to finance local public services without distorting locational choices.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Theory of Public Finance in a Federal State , pp. 191 - 200Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000