Discussion paper

DP2336 A Political Economy Model of Infrastructure Allocation: An Empirical Assessment

This paper proposes a simultaneous-equation approach to the estimation of the contribution of transport infrastructure accumulation to regional growth. We model explicitly the political-economy process driving infrastructure investments; in doing so, we eliminate a potential source of bias in production-function estimates and generate testable hypotheses on the forces that shape infrastructure policy. Our empirical findings on a panel of France's regions over 1985-91 suggest that influence activities were, indeed, significant determinants of the cross-regional allocation of transportation infrastructure investments. Moreover, we find little evidence of concern for the maximization of economic returns to infrastructure spending, even after controlling for pork-barrel and when imposing an exogenous preference for convergence in regional productivity levels.

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Citation

Röller, L, O Cadot and A Stephan (1999), ‘DP2336 A Political Economy Model of Infrastructure Allocation: An Empirical Assessment‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 2336. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp2336