Published September 2015 | Version v1
Publication

When Geography Matters for Growth: Market Inefficiencies and Public Policy Implications

Description

We propose a unique market and social planner solution for a generalized New EconomicGeography and Growth model to highlight the importance of taking account of the existenceof agglomeration externalities in an analysis of market inefficiencies, which allows us to providesome important implications for public policy. This framework among other things, allows us todisentangle an insufficient growth condition from an under-investment in R&D condition whichin turn allows us to explain various market steady state situations. For instance, it provides anexplanation for situations where the market economy grows too slowly and over-invest in R&D(as opposed to an a-spatial model). By evaluating the effects of two strategic policies, namelyinnovation policy and industrial policy, on market inefficiencies, we show that (1) the efficiencyof a policy evolves strongly with the market economy situation and no policy is the most efficientin all situations, (2) the geography of economic activities and the question of over or underagglomerationof the market economy plays a central role on the relative efficiency of policies and(3) industrial and innovation policies are only partially complementary but policy-mixes can bejustified if some market gaps are more important than others.

Additional details

Created:
March 26, 2023
Modified:
November 30, 2023