Working Paper

Do Governments Tax Agglomeration Rents?

Hyun-Ju Koh, Nadine Riedel
CESifo, Munich, 2010

CESifo Working Paper No. 2976

Using the German local business tax as a testing ground, we empirically investigate the impact of firm agglomeration on municipal tax setting behavior. The analysis exploits a rich data source on the population of German firms to construct detailed measures for the communities’ agglomeration characteristics. The findings indicate that urbanization and localization economies exert a positive impact on the jurisdictional tax rate choice which confirms predictions of the theoretical New Economic Geography (NEG) literature. Further analysis suggests a qualification of the NEG argument by showing that a municipality’s potential to tax agglomeration rents depends on its firm and industry agglomeration relative to neighboring communities. To account for potential endogeneity problems, our analysis exploits long-lagged population and infrastructure variables as instruments for the agglomeration measures.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Keywords: agglomeration rents, corporate taxation, regional differentiation
JEL Classification: H730,R120