Public Infrastructure Investments, Productivity and Welfare in Fixed Geographic Areas
38 Pages Posted: 1 Oct 2006
Date Written: May 2000
Abstract
Measures of the value of public investments are critical inputs into the policy process, and aggregate production and cost functions have become the dominant methods of evaluating these benefits. This paper examines the limitations of these approaches in light of applied production and spatial equilibrium theories. A spatial general equilibrium model of an economy with nontraded, localized public goods like infrastructure is proposed, and a method for identifying the role of public capital in firm production and household preferences is derived. Empirical evidence from a sample of large U.S. cities suggests that while public capital provides significant productivity and consumption benefits, an ambitious program of locally funded infrastructure provision would likely generate negative net benefits for these cities.
Keywords: infrastructure, regional economics, regional land, labor markets
JEL Classification: H4, R13, H72
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Measuring the Contribution of Public Infrastructure Capital in Sweden
By Ernst R. Berndt and Bengt Hansson
-
Endogenous Growth, Public Capital, and the Convergence of Regional Manufacturing Industries
-
Spatial Productivity Spillovers from Public Infrastructure: Evidence from State Highways
-
Consumer Benefits of Infrastructure Services
By Carmit Schwartz, W. Erwin Diewert, ...
-
TFP, Costs, and Public Infrastructure: An Equivocal Relationship
-
Motorization and the Provision of Roads in Countries and Cities
By Gregory K. Ingram and Zhi Liu