Working Paper

Dynamics of Policy Adoption with State Dependence

David R. Agrawal, Gregory A. Trandel
CESifo, Munich, 2019

CESifo Working Paper No. 7867

We study the dynamics of policy diffusion when a first-moving jurisdiction that legalizes an activity reduces the probability of legalization in nearby later-acting jurisdictions. If a jurisdiction’s firms can sell to neighboring residents, but if the good is competitively sold at every location, then policies converge: all jurisdictions legalize or all jurisdictions ban. If firms have some market power, and if the location of firms depends on the order of legalization, an early-adopting government may legalize, but an otherwise identical, but later-acting, neighboring government might not. This possible asymmetry is due to state dependence resulting from the initial distribution of firms following the first-mover’s legalization. Empirically, counties that legalize the sale of fireworks first have more firework vendors just inside their border than counties that legalize later. Furthermore, counties have a longer duration to legalize fireworks if nearby counties have already adopted. State dependence resulting from a first-mover advantage contributes to the policy divergence of regulatory policies.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Industrial Organisation
Keywords: dynamics, fiscal competition, state dependence, externalities, borders
JEL Classification: H700, K200, L500, R300, R500