International audienceWe revisit the Tiebout hypothesis in a world in which agents may learn extra information as to how they value the various local public goods once located, and jurisdictions are free to commit to whatever mechanism to attract citizens. It is shown in quasi-linear environments that efficiency can be achieved as a competitive equilibrium when jurisdictions seek to maximize local revenues but not necessarily when they seek to maximize local welfare. Interpretations and limitations of the result are discussed
We consider the problem of producing an impure public good in var-ious jurisdictions formed through ...
A standard approach to designing a successful mechanism is to endow the mechanism with a bundle of d...
This paper considers a dynamic model of Tiebout-like migration between communities that utilize dist...
We revisit the Tiebout hypothesis in a world in which agents may learn extra information as to how t...
International audienceWe revisit the Tiebout hypothesis in a world in which agents may learn extra i...
We revisit the Tiebout hypothesis in a world in which agents may learn extra information as to how t...
The Tiebout Hypothesis asserts that, when it is efficient to have multiple jurisdictions providing l...
The Tiebout Hypothesis is that individuals reveal their preferences for high or low public services...
This paper establishes the existence and efficiency of equilibrium in a local public goods economy w...
Tiebout's basic claim was that when public goods are local there is an equilibrium and every equilib...
Charles Tiebout’s (1956) suggestion that people “vote with their feet ” to find the commu-nity that ...
We re-examine Tiebout's hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibrium framew...
We consider the problem of producing an impure public good in var-ious jurisdictions formed through ...
A standard approach to designing a successful mechanism is to endow the mechanism with a bundle of d...
This paper considers a dynamic model of Tiebout-like migration between communities that utilize dist...
We revisit the Tiebout hypothesis in a world in which agents may learn extra information as to how t...
International audienceWe revisit the Tiebout hypothesis in a world in which agents may learn extra i...
We revisit the Tiebout hypothesis in a world in which agents may learn extra information as to how t...
The Tiebout Hypothesis asserts that, when it is efficient to have multiple jurisdictions providing l...
The Tiebout Hypothesis is that individuals reveal their preferences for high or low public services...
This paper establishes the existence and efficiency of equilibrium in a local public goods economy w...
Tiebout's basic claim was that when public goods are local there is an equilibrium and every equilib...
Charles Tiebout’s (1956) suggestion that people “vote with their feet ” to find the commu-nity that ...
We re-examine Tiebout's hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibrium framew...
We consider the problem of producing an impure public good in var-ious jurisdictions formed through ...
A standard approach to designing a successful mechanism is to endow the mechanism with a bundle of d...
This paper considers a dynamic model of Tiebout-like migration between communities that utilize dist...