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Solved: Government Competition Leviathan and

Benevolence Suppose governments can spend taxpayer


Government Competition Leviathan and Benevolence Suppose governments can spend
taxpayer

Government Competition, Leviathan and Benevolence: Suppose governments can spend


taxpayer resources on both public goods that have social benefits and political “rents” that are
private benefits for government officials. To the extent to which governments emphasize the
latter over the former, we have called them “Leviathan” — and this exercise investigates to what
extent competition between governments can restrain this Leviathan. To the extent to which
governments emphasize the former, we will call them “benevolent”. In part B of the exercise,
we consider competition between such benevolent governments.

A: Consider a collection N of local governments that can employ local property taxes to fund
public goods and local political rents. Suppose that local governments are pure Leviathans—i.e.
they seek only political rents. For simplicity, suppose also that all households are identical.

(a) Begin with a simple demand and supply (for housing) graph for one community. If a local
Leviathan government is a political monopolist in the sense that it faces no competitive
pressures from other communities, how would it go about setting the tax rate that maximizes its
rents?

(b) Now consider the case where households are fully mobile across jurisdictional boundaries—
and thus choose to live where their utility is highest. In equilibrium, how must utility in any
jurisdiction i be related to utility in any other jurisdiction j?

(c) Suppose that the property tax is zero in all communities. Consider community i’s Leviathan
mayor. If he raises ti above zero, and uses the revenues only for political rents, what will have to
be true about housing prices in community i after the tax is imposed (relative to before it is
imposed)? Can you demonstrate how this comes about? (Hint: Consider the competitive
pressure from household mobility.)

(d) True or False: So long as housing supply is not perfectly elastic, the Leviathan mayor in part
(c) will be able to raise property taxes to fund political rents.

(e) Now consider all local governments setting some tax rate t and using revenues for political
rents. If t is very low, can a single community’s Leviathan’s mayor benefit from raising his tax
rate? If t is very high, can a single Leviathan mayor benefit from lowering his tax rate?

(f) Use your answer to (e) to argue that there must exist some level of Leviathan taxation across
competing communities that will be a Nash equilibrium.

(g) Evaluate the following statement: “Unless housing supply is perfectly elastic, government

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competition between Leviathan governments is not sufficient to eliminate political rents — but it
restrains the ability of Leviathan government to amass such rents.”

(h) True or False: To the extent to which government behavior is characterized by rent-seeking,
greater competition between governments enhances efficiency.

B: Next, consider the opposite type of government—i.e. one that is benevolent and raises taxes
only to the extent to which it can find worthwhile public goods to finance. Suppose again that
there are N such governments that use a local property tax to fund local public goods — and
suppose that all public benefits from such public goods are contained within each government’s
jurisdictional boundaries.

(a) Begin, as in A (a), by assuming that there is mobility of consumers across jurisdictions and
thus no government faces any competitive pressures. Will they produce the efficient level of
local public goods?

(b) Next, consider the competitive case. If the projects funded by local governments are truly
local public goods, in what sense are taxes imposed by benevolent governments offset by
benefits received?

(c) Suppose other governments are charging low tax rates that result in inefficiently low levels of
public goods. If community i raises its tax rate and provide more public goods, will population
increase or decrease in community i? Will housing prices go up or down?

(d) Consider an equilibrium with benevolent local governments providing efficient levels of local
public goods. Can any government raise property values by raising or lowering taxes? True or
False: Property values maximizing local governments behave like benevolent local
governments.

(e) Suppose next that local property taxes are paid by both households and firms — but only
households’ benefit from local public goods (like schools). If firms are mobile, in what sense
does community i ’s decision to tax the property of firms give rise to a positive externality for
other communities?

(f) What does your answer to (e) imply about the spending levels by benevolent local
governments as competitive pressures increase in environments such as those described in
(e)?

Government Competition Leviathan and Benevolence Suppose governments can spend


taxpayer

ANSWER
https://solvedquest.com/government-competition-leviathan-and-benevolence-suppose-
governments-can-spend-taxpayer/

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