Teresa Garcia-Milà
Pompeu Fabra University
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Featured researches published by Teresa Garcia-Milà.
Regional Science and Urban Economics | 1992
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Therese J. McGuire
Abstract We specify a regional production function that, in addition to labor and private capital, includes two publicly provided inputs — highways and education. We employ a panel data set consisting of annual observations on the 48 contiguous states from 1969 to 1983 to estimate input elasticity coefficients under a specification that allows for differences over time and across states. We find that both of the publicly provided inputs have a significant and positive effect on output. Our results support the policy conclusion that publicly provided infrastructure is an important element of economic growth.
The Review of Economics and Statistics | 1996
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Therese J. McGuire; Robert H. Porter
Using a panel data set for the forty-eight contiguous states from 1970 to 1983, several estimates are provided of a Cobb-Douglas production function with three types of public capital as inputs. Various specification tests are systematically applied to test for both random and fixed state effects, nonstationarity, endogeneity of the private inputs, and measurement error. In the preferred specification, which is first differences with fixed state effects, the public capital variables are not significant, while the fixed state effects and private input variables are significant. Copyright 1996 by MIT Press.
The Economic Journal | 2010
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Albert Marcet; Eva Ventura
We evaluate the effect on welfare of shifting the burden of capital income taxes to labour taxes in a dynamic equilibrium model with heterogeneous agents and constant tax rates. We calibrate and simulate the economy; we find that lowering capital taxes has two effects: it increases efficiency in terms of aggregate production and it redistributes wealth in favour of those agents with a low wage/wealth ratio. When the parameters of the model are calibrated to match the distribution of income in terms of the wage/wealth ratio, the redistributive effect dominates, and agents with a high wage/wealth ratio would experience a large loss in utility if capital income taxes were eliminated.
Regional Science and Urban Economics | 1993
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Therese J. McGuire
Abstract We use annual employment data for the states and the United States from 1969 to 1985 to estimate trend rates of growth and deviations from trend for the state economies. We calculate measures of growth and variability for each state that are net of the effect of the state industrial mix interacting with the national industrial growth rates and variabilities. We find great variety in the macroeconomic behavior of the regional state economies, and we present evidence that the industrial mix of an economy is one factor that helps explain differences in net growth rates and variabilities across the states.
Chapters | 2007
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Therese J. McGuire
Asymmetric fiscal decentralization, by which we mean different fiscal arrangements between the central government and different groups of, or individual, lower-level governments, may be justified from an economic efficiency perspective. As argued by Tiebout (1956), Oates (1972) and others, a decentralized system of regional and local governments is better able to accommodate differences in tastes for public goods and services. This efficiency argument calls for decentralization of fiscal authority to regional and local governments, but not necessarily asymmetric decentralization. However, when the differences in tastes for public goods and services arise out of differences in history, culture and language across regions of a country, asymmetric treatment may be justified. History, culture and language may influence how a group of people (a region) views autonomy, independence and fiscal authority. Some regions may have had experience with autonomous government in the past, they may have a culture that is strongly reliant upon (or leery of) the central government, or they may be fearful of losing their separate languages if they do not have special arrangements. To accommodate differences in taste for independence, autonomy, and fiscal authority, it may be necessary to have different fiscal arrangements between the central government and the different regions comprising the country.
Social Science Research Network | 2002
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Timothy J. Goodspeed; Therese J. McGuire
As part of a process of democratization, many countries spanning Europe, Latin Amertica, Africa, and Asia are reorganizing their governments by devolving fiscal responsibility and authority to newly empowered regional and local governments. Although decentralization in each country proceeds differently, a common element tends to be an initially heavy reliance on central government grants to fund regional spending. We develop a theoretical model of regional borrowing decisions in which the incentives for regional borrowing depend crucially on how the regions expect the federal system of finance to evolve. We examine the implications of the model using data on Spanish regions for the period 1984-1995 and find evidence that regions may be borrowing inefficiently in response to incentives imbedded in the Spanish system of fiscal decentralization.
Economics Letters | 1989
Teresa Garcia-Milà
Abstract A multiplier effect of state and local government purchases is found when estimating a vector autoregression of components of GNP. Military purchases, on the other hand, are only slightly expansionary in the very short term. Government purchases account for a substantial part of the variance of GNP.
Journal of Regional Science | 1998
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Therese J. McGuire
Using data for the 50 U.S. states we relate industry-specific employment growth rates over the period 1976-1989 to the industrial compositions of the states in 1976. We explore the idea that services and manufacturing are inextricably linked and that this interdependence may be beneficial to manufacturing (through knowledge spillovers, for example). Specifically, we test whether the manufacturing sector grew faster in service- based economies. Our evidence does not support the idea of cross-fertilization from services to manufacturing.
Brookings-Wharton Papers on Urban Affairs | 2002
Teresa Garcia-Milà; Therese J. McGuire
It is difficult to justify tax incentives within the existing economics literature on tax competition. We develop a model in which communities are interested in attracting firms not only for their own capital but also for the “concentration externalities,” a form of agglomeration economies, their location bestows on existing firms. We find that it is efficient in this case for communities to offer tax incentives, defined as a tax rate below the benefit tax level, to firms. We present the recent relocation of the Boeing Corporations headquarters from Seattle to Chicago as a case study.
Archive | 2006
Xavier Calsamiglia; Teresa Garcia-Milà; Therese J. McGuire