Working Paper

Public Investment as Commitment

Reyer Gerlagh, Matti Liski
CESifo, Munich, 2011

CESifo Working Paper No. 3330

Should public assets such as infrastructure, education, and the environment earn the same return as private investments? We consider if time-inconsistent decision-makers can gain from institutions that enforce cost-benefit rules on large projects that influence the economy as a whole. Long-term public investments provide commitment to current preferences, leading to investment biases in such assets. The institutionalized cost-benefit prudence eliminates such biases but we show that this behavioral rule has no general social value: it implements Pareto efficiency if and only if preferences are time-consistent, and decreases welfare otherwise. We find that the long-term cost-benefit prudence is fundamentally about income transfers to the future, implying that efficient behavioral rules should target savings directly rather than the division of current investment resources.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Resources and Environment
Keywords: public investments, cost-benefit analysis, inconsistent preferences
JEL Classification: H430, H410, D610, D910, Q540, E210