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County capital cities, county public finance and county economic geography

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Abstract.

We are interested in the county government’s role for the county seat economy. Our suggestion is this: Rather than discuss changes in county seat location at a given budget (representing a rare natural experiment), we should look at changes in county budget holding fixed county seat location (yielding a steady flow of observations). In the paper’s model changes in the county budget translate into changes in county seat employment. In the paper’s empirical test against a sample of German county seats we find it difficult to reject this.

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Correspondence to Kristof Dascher.

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Received: February 2003, Accepted: Accepted May 2004

JEL Classification:

R53, H72, R23

Kristof Dascher: I have benefitted from comments by three anonymous referees. I am also grateful for financial support from the CEPR research network on Foreign Direct Investment and the Multinational Organization, funded by the European Commission under contract number ERBFMRXCT980215.

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Dascher, K. County capital cities, county public finance and county economic geography. Economics of Governance 5, 213–233 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10101-004-0076-8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10101-004-0076-8

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