Article, data, .do file Both countries and subnational governments commonly engage in competition for mobile capital, offering generous incentives to attract investment. Existing economics research has suggested that these tax incentives have a limited ability to affect investment patterns and are often excessively costly when measured against the amount of investment and jobs created. In this paper, we argue instead that the “competition” for capital can be politically beneficial to incumbent politicians. Building off work on electoral pandering, we argue that incentives allow politicians to take credit for firms’ investment decisions. We test the empirical implications of this theory using a nationwide Internet survey, which employs ...
Voter turnout is frequently cited as gauging a polity's health. The ease with which electoral member...
Tax and subsidy competition has two structural sources: the need of governments for investment, what...
How can managers successfully access political rents by way of corporate political strategies (CPA)?...
Both countries and subnational governments commonly engage in competition for mobile capital, offeri...
Both countries and subnational governments commonly engage in competition for mobile capital, offeri...
Through a field experiment and audit study we test how the electoral calendar affects the use of loc...
The authors find that there are strong political benefits to attracting FDI at the state-level in th...
This paper investigates whether corporate political influence affects government investment decision...
Many argue that government partisanship influences the size of investment flows into stocks and bond...
Asset mobility is thought to constrain taxation, as firms with mobile assets can avoid taxation by l...
Recent literature shows that the spike in uncertainty during political elections harms firms’ invest...
a b s t r a c t This paper investigates ment investment. We connections between firms and politician...
Why do states persist in offering large financial incentives to firms to induce them to invest in th...
We experimentally study the common wisdom that money buys political influence. In the game, one spec...
This article makes several contributions to the literature on political risk and the determinants of...
Voter turnout is frequently cited as gauging a polity's health. The ease with which electoral member...
Tax and subsidy competition has two structural sources: the need of governments for investment, what...
How can managers successfully access political rents by way of corporate political strategies (CPA)?...
Both countries and subnational governments commonly engage in competition for mobile capital, offeri...
Both countries and subnational governments commonly engage in competition for mobile capital, offeri...
Through a field experiment and audit study we test how the electoral calendar affects the use of loc...
The authors find that there are strong political benefits to attracting FDI at the state-level in th...
This paper investigates whether corporate political influence affects government investment decision...
Many argue that government partisanship influences the size of investment flows into stocks and bond...
Asset mobility is thought to constrain taxation, as firms with mobile assets can avoid taxation by l...
Recent literature shows that the spike in uncertainty during political elections harms firms’ invest...
a b s t r a c t This paper investigates ment investment. We connections between firms and politician...
Why do states persist in offering large financial incentives to firms to induce them to invest in th...
We experimentally study the common wisdom that money buys political influence. In the game, one spec...
This article makes several contributions to the literature on political risk and the determinants of...
Voter turnout is frequently cited as gauging a polity's health. The ease with which electoral member...
Tax and subsidy competition has two structural sources: the need of governments for investment, what...
How can managers successfully access political rents by way of corporate political strategies (CPA)?...