Working Paper

FDI, Trade Costs and Regional Asymmetries

Julia Darby, Ben Ferrett, Ian Wooton
CESifo, Munich, 2013

CESifo Working Paper No. 4469

We set up a trade model where three countries compete for an exogenous number of firms. Our innovation lies in the geography of the model. Of the three countries, one is the hub through which all trade takes place. First, we establish the natural geography of the region, which is given by the equilibrium distribution of industrial activity in the absence of taxes or subsidies. We then examine the implications for corporate taxes when the countries compete with each other to attract firms. We find that, even when all countries are the same size, the centrality of the hub gives it an advantage in tax setting, such that its equilibrium tax can be larger than that of the spokes and yet it still attracts a disproportionate share of industry. Thus geographic advantage in tax competition has a second dimension, centrality in addition to size.

CESifo Category
Trade Policy
Public Finance
Keywords: corporate taxes, devolution, trade costs
JEL Classification: F150, F230, H250, H730