Working Paper

The Persistent Effects of Place-Based Policy: Evidence from the West-German Zonenrandgebiet

Maximilian von Ehrlich, Tobias Seidel
CESifo, Munich, 2015

CESifo Working Paper No. 5373

Using a natural experiment from Germany, we show that temporary place-based subsidies generate persistent effects on economic density. We identify employment and capital formation as main channels for higher income per square kilometer. As the spatial regression discontinuity design allows us to control for all spatially-continuous determinants of agglomeration (e.g. homemarket effects, knowledge spillovers), we attribute an important role to capital formation in explaining persistent spatial patterns of economic activity. However, estimates of externalities at the treatment border point to small net effects of the policy. We find strong evidence that pre-treatment land owners have benefitted substantially from the program and that transfers have shown larger effects in high-density places. Finally, accounting for regional subsidies raises the causal effect of market access for economic development as identified in Redding and Sturm (2008) by about 45 percent.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Keywords: place-based policy, regional policy, economic geography, persistence, regression discontinuity, locational advantage, land value capitalization
JEL Classification: H250, H400, H540, O150, O180, R120