On the optimal allocation of responsibilities among national and subnational governments

Speaker
Yaniv Reingewertz
Date
01/12/2025 - 12:30 - 11:15Add to Calendar 2025-12-01 11:15:47 2025-12-01 12:30:00 On the optimal allocation of responsibilities among national and subnational governments This paper introduces a model for optimizing local public goods provision across national, regional, and local government tiers. We analyze how spillovers, preference heterogeneity, and economies of scale affect centralization versus decentralization decisions. Three key insights emerge: (a) Adding regional governments to the model creates subnational solutions for inter-local spillovers, (b) Preference heterogeneity incentivizes decentralization, (c) Economies of scale favor centralization for efficiency gains. The optimal responsibility distribution depends on these three competing forces' interplay. Our model integrates previous studies' insights into a unified theory encompassing the primary forces influencing centralization-decentralization decisions across government tiers. Seminar room 011, building 504 אוניברסיטת בר-אילן - Department of Economics Economics.Dept@mail.biu.ac.il Asia/Jerusalem public
Place
Seminar room 011, building 504
Affiliation
University of Haifa
Abstract


This paper introduces a model for optimizing local public goods provision across national, regional, and local government tiers. We analyze how spillovers, preference heterogeneity, and economies of scale affect centralization versus decentralization decisions. Three key insights emerge: (a) Adding regional governments to the model creates subnational solutions for inter-local spillovers, (b) Preference heterogeneity incentivizes decentralization, (c) Economies of scale favor centralization for efficiency gains. The optimal responsibility distribution depends on these three competing forces' interplay. Our model integrates previous studies' insights into a unified theory encompassing the primary forces influencing centralization-decentralization decisions across government tiers.

Last Updated Date : 27/11/2025