We pursue the question of whether and how differences in productive public expenditure impacts on industrial location. The public sector, which operates with a balanced budget constraint, finances its expenditures taxing residents’ income. Since the introduction of productive public expenditure and taxation affects in opposite direction the industrial location, results are very sensitive to the specific parameter constellation assumed. That is, it is not straightforward that following an increase in productive public expenditure in a region, that region will necessarily enjoy stronger agglomeration. As a major contribution to the literature, our approach considers jointly two effects arising from public policy decisions on expenditure: the ...