2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10797-009-9118-z
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Consumption tax competition among governments: Evidence from the United States

Abstract: The paper contributes to a small but growing literature that estimates tax reaction functions of governments competing with other governments. We analyze consumption tax competition between US states, employing a panel of state-level data for . More specifically, we study the impact of a state's spatial characteristics (i.e., its size, geographic position, and border length) on the strategic interaction with its neighbors. For this purpose, we calculate for each state an average effective consumption tax rate,… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(27 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…The first one is based on a contiguity matrix, where the value 1 is assigned if two jurisdictions share the same border and 0 otherwise. An alternative is to use the inverse distances of two jurisdictions as weights (e.g., Foucault et al, 2008;Ghinamo et al, 2010;Jacobs et al, 2010;Klemm and Van Parys, 2012). Since the neighbors of a state may not be in the opposite type of this state at the same time, so the contiguity method may not coincide with my primary objective to explore the competition among initially poorly-and well-endowed states.…”
Section: Regional Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first one is based on a contiguity matrix, where the value 1 is assigned if two jurisdictions share the same border and 0 otherwise. An alternative is to use the inverse distances of two jurisdictions as weights (e.g., Foucault et al, 2008;Ghinamo et al, 2010;Jacobs et al, 2010;Klemm and Van Parys, 2012). Since the neighbors of a state may not be in the opposite type of this state at the same time, so the contiguity method may not coincide with my primary objective to explore the competition among initially poorly-and well-endowed states.…”
Section: Regional Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The former variable is consistent with the theoretical model in Nielsen (2001) (as well as the one in this paper) while the latter corresponds to the model in Kanbur and Keen (1993). Previous empirical studies tend to use an absolute measure of country size, with the exception of Egger et al (2005) and Jacobs et al (2007) who use both domestic country size and the weighted country size of neighbors as explanatory variables. Since I estimate the model in first differences I prefer to measure country size in relative terms.…”
Section: Country Sizementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper represents one of the first attempts within spatial public finance to overcome these weaknesses by exploiting plausibly exogenous variation resulting from institutional aspects of the tax system. I move away from the direct approach of studying fiscal competition via reaction functions (Devereux, Lockwood andRedoano 2007 andJacobs, Ligthart andVrijburg 2010) and instead exploit institutional and spatial aspects of the federalist tax system to construct a quasi-experimental design. Moreover, I exploit the intensity of the policy discontinuities at borders to identify causal effects.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%