ABSTRACT

This book provides an original framework to assess public investment policies co-financed by Union (Federal) governments. This framework is applied to two important case studies: the EU Cohesion Policy and the US Federal Investment Policies.

Cost-Benefit Analysis of Multi-Level Government sheds light on a number of outstanding issues of economic theory by extending the theory of shadow prices, and provides guidance to real-world decision makers. In particular, the following questions are addressed:

  • Under which theoretical circumstances, higher level government intervention in Member States through investment policies is justified?

  • Is there any new welfare economics rationale underpinning interregional equity? What is the relationship between interregional and interpersonal income distribution? How can social exclusion be included in cost-benefit tests?

  • How can higher level government budget funds to investment policies before it bargains programming documents with lower tiers of government by considering also their response function?

  • In these circumstances, how can optimal matching rates be derived assuming binding and non binding budgetary constraints?

  • Can such a theoretical framework be applied for guidance to real-world decision makers?

The book will be of interest to policy makers, postgraduate students and researchers in cost-benefit analysis, welfare economics, public choice, public finance, multi-level government economics, and income distribution issues.

part |2 pages

Part I Introduction

chapter 1|42 pages

The Economic Theory of Shadow Pricing

part |2 pages

Part II Case Studies

part |2 pages

Part III The New Theoretical Framework

chapter 4|20 pages

The Case for EU Intervention: discussion

chapter 6|25 pages

The Impact of EU Intervention

chapter 7|18 pages

Welfare Weights

chapter 8|16 pages

Social Discount Rates

chapter 9|24 pages

Shadow Wage Rates

part |2 pages

Part IV Theoretical Insights and Policy Implications