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Agglomeration, Integration and Tax Harmonization Author info | Abstract | Publisher info | Download info | Related research | Statistics Richard Baldwin; Paul Krugman () (IUHEI; MIT )
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This paper considers tax competition and tax harmonization in the presence of agglomeration forces and falling trade costs. With agglomerative forces operating, industry is not indifferent to location in equilibrium, so perfectly mobile capital becomes a quasi-fixed factor. This suggests that the tax game is something subtler than a race to the bottom. Advanced 'core' nations may act like limit-pricing monopolists toward less advanced 'periphery' countries. Consequently, integration need not lead to falling tax rates, and might well be consistent with the maintenance of large welfare states. "Limit taxing" also means that that simple tax harmonization - adoption of a common tax rate - always harms at least one nation and adoption of a rate between the two unharmonised rates harms both nations. A tax floor set at the lowest equilibrium tax rate leads to a weak Pareto improvement.
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Paper provided by Economics Section, The Graduate Institute of International Studies in its series HEI Working Papers with number
HEIWP01-2001.
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Date of creation: Jan 2001Date of revision:
Handle: RePEc:gii:giihei:heiwp01-2001Contact details of provider: Postal: P.O. Box 36, 1211 Geneva 21 Phone: ++41 22 731 17 30 Fax: ++41 22 738 43 06 Email: Web page: http://hei.unige.ch/sections/ec/ More information through EDIRC
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Keywords: Tax Competition ; Tax Harmonization ; New Economic Geography ; Geography ; Agglomeration ; Trade ; European Integration ; Other versions of this item:
Article Paper Richard E. Baldwin & Paul Krugman, 2002.
"Agglomeration, Integration and Tax Harmonization ,"
NBER Working Papers
9290, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
[Downloadable!] (restricted) Baldwin, Richard & Krugman, Paul, 2000.
"Agglomeration, Integration and Tax Harmonization ,"
CEPR Discussion Papers
2630, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers.
[Downloadable!] (restricted) This paper has been announced in the following NEP Reports :
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