From Nathan Jensen, Edmund Malesky, Mariana Medina, Ugur Ozdemir:
Both countries and subnational governments commonly engage in competition for mobile capital, offering generous incentives to attract investment. Existing 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. If tax incentives have such uncertain benefits, why offer them? In this paper, we build off work on electoral pandering to 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 a randomized experiment to test how voters evaluate the performance of incumbent U.S. governors. Our findings illustrate a critical political benefit of offering such incentives. Politicians can use these incentives to take credit for investment flowing into their districts and to minimize the political fallout…
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