Location, Concentration, and Performance of Economic Activity in Brazil
Author: Richard G. Funderburg
Publisher: World Bank Publications
Published: 2004
Total Pages: 43
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWhat are the prospects for economic development in lagging subnational regions? What are the roles of public infrastructure investments and fiscal incentives in influencing the location and performance of industrial activity? To examine these questions, Lall, Funderburg, and Yepes estimate a spatial profit function for industrial activity in Brazil that explicitly incorporates infrastructure improvements and fiscal incentives in the cost structure of individual firms. The authors use firm level data from the 2001 annual industrial survey along with spatially disaggregated regional data and find that there are considerable cost savings from being located in areas with relatively lower transport costs to reach large markets. In comparison, fiscal incentives, such as tax expenditures, have modest effects in terms of influencing firm level costs. Although the results suggest that firms benefit from being in locations with good access to markets, the authors do not suggest that improving interregional connectivity would necessarily assist lagging regions. In the short run, improving interregional connectivity implicitly reduces a natural tariff barrier so firms currently serving large markets and benefiting from economies of scale can more easily expand into new markets in competition with local producers. Therefore, producers in the leading regions can crowd out local producers, which would be detrimental for local production and employment in the lagging region. This paper--a product of Infrastructure and Environment, Development Research Group--is part of a larger effort in the group to examine the impacts of spatial policy interventions on the performance of economic activity.