1 / 21

Berlin

Federalism and Economic Performance: Evidence for Swiss Cantons Presentation at the BMF-ZEW-Conference on Fiscal Policy Challenges in Europe, Berlin, March 23, 2007. Prof. Dr. Lars P. Feld University of Heidelberg, University of St. Gallen (SIAW-HSG), ZEW Mannheim, Crema Basel and CESifo Munich.

Télécharger la présentation

Berlin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Federalism and Economic Performance:Evidence for Swiss CantonsPresentation at the BMF-ZEW-Conference on Fiscal Policy Challenges in Europe, Berlin, March 23, 2007 Prof. Dr. Lars P. FeldUniversity of Heidelberg,University of St. Gallen (SIAW-HSG), ZEW Mannheim, Crema Basel and CESifo Munich Berlin

  2. In a Nutshell • Difference to the Literature • Literature is on fiscal decentralization and economic growth • Here: Instruments of fiscal federalism and economic performance. • ‚Instruments‘ are tax competition, grants, fragmentation. • Message • Tax competition is not harmful to regional performance. • No clear-cut results on grants. • Fragmentation is not harmful to economic performance. Berlin

  3. Federalism and Economic Performance Outline of the Presentation • Introduction • Theoretical Background • Empirical Studies • Swiss Federalism • Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland • Conclusion Berlin

  4. Introduction • Political Discussion around the World • Commission on Fiscal Federalism in Germany • Is German federalism harmful for economic development? • Joint Decision Trap • Similar discussions in Austria and Switzerland. • Academic Discussion • What is the impact of vertical separation or division of powers on economic development of countries? • Federations vs. unitary states. • Cooperative vs. competitive federalism. Berlin

  5. Introduction • Advantages and Disadvantages of Federalism • Broad discussion in the literature. • Theory of fiscal federalism and plenty of interjurisdictional externalities. • Political economy arguments. • Specific problems in developing countries. • Corruption. • Contradictory Hypotheses • Necessity to conduct empirical research. • Empirical study on Switzerland is particularly helpful. Berlin

  6. Theoretical Background Berlin

  7. Theoretical Background • Regional Development and Convergence • Competitive federalism • Efficiency gains and political innovation • vs. Brain drain • Fiscal equalization/ grants • Income increase and attraction of new industries • Disincentives for structural change and bail-out problems • National Economic Growth • Competitive federalism: • Efficiency reserves vs. decline of help to change economis structures • Fiscal equalization/ grants • Negative incentives vs. development aid. Berlin

  8. Empirical Studies • Cross Country Studies • Still ambiguous results on fiscal decentralization and economic growth. • Specific problems of LDCs. • Autonomy vs. share of decentralized spending. • China • First glance: Ambiguous results. • Second evaluative view: Fiscal decentralization has a positive impact on economic growth of Chinese provinces. Berlin

  9. Empirical Studies • USA • Xie, Zou and Davoodi (1999): • National level: U.S. are in a decentralization equilibrium, because decentralization has no significant impact on national economic growth. • Akai and Sakata (2002) • State level: Decentralization in the U.S. states has a positive impact on their development. • Local Autonomy measured by the share of own from total revenue does not have a significant impact. • Stansel (2005) • Higher fragmentation is associated with significantly higher growth in (log) real per capita money income at the municipal level. Berlin

  10. Empirical Studies • Germany • Behnisch, Büttner and Stegarescu (1999): • National level: Increasing federal share of total spending has a positive impact on total productivity growth. • Berthold, Drews and Thode (2001) • State level: Horizontal fiscal equalization and vertical supplementary grants have a negative impact on regional development of the German states. • Panel of 16 states from 1991 to 1998: Methodological Problems. • Berthold, Drews and Thode (2007) • Panel of 16 states from 1991 to 1998: Still Methodological Problems due to Invalid Instruments. • General Problems of the Studies • Too strong concentration on decentralization measures. • Autonomy and instruments of federalism. Berlin

  11. Swiss Federalism Berlin

  12. Swiss Federalism II CH:Population 7'261'200 Foreigners 1'457'800 Area: 41‘293 km2 26 Cantons (AI 14'900 Inhabitants) 2903 Communes Berlin

  13. Swiss Federalism III Berlin

  14. Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland • Econometric Approach • Exogenous Growth Model • Production function of Mankiw, Romer and Weil (1992) • Organisation of federalism as technological progress. Berlin

  15. Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland • Variables • Qit : Real GDP; • Lit: Number of Employees • Hit: Share of People with High School Degree or Cantonal Education Spending per Capita • Kit: Private Investment • Vit: Vector of Controls • 0to4: Parameters • it: Error Term. Berlin

  16. Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland • Federalism Variables • Share of Decentralization: Share of local spending (tax revenue) from total local and cantonal spending (tax revenue) • Grants per capita • Lump sum grants • Matching grants • Urbanisation as a proxy for agglomeration economies Berlin

  17. Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland • Federalism Variables • Fragmentation of a canton in communities as a proxy for economies of scale in consumption. • Tax competition • Difference between an canton‘s tax rate and the average tax burden of other cantons (weithed by the inverse of distance) in the highest income tax bracket (1 million SFr). • Language dummy • Dummy Basel-City. Berlin

  18. Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland • Panel of 26 Cantons from 1980 to 1998 • OLS and TSLS with time dummies • Instruments: • Cantonal Dummies • Lagged grants and federal index of mountainous areas • Proxies for interest group influence • Robust standard errors (Clustering-Method). Berlin

  19. Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland Berlin

  20. Results on Federalism and Economic Performance in Switzerland

  21. Conclusion • Impact of Swiss fiscal federalism on cantonal economic performance • Production function approach • Panel of cantons from 1980 - 1998 • Grants, in particular matching grants, is negatively correlated with GDP per employee. • Tax competition is not harmful. • Economies of scale do not have a significant impact. • Robustness Checks • Fixed effects regressions. • Growth regressions. • Interaction of population with tax competition proxy. • Political Controls. Berlin

More Related