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State Infrastructure and Productive Performance

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TLDR
In this paper, a more complete production theory model of firms' production and input decisions is proposed to evaluate the contribution of infrastructure investment to firms' costs and productivity growth, and they find that infrastructure investment does provide a significant direct benefit to manufacturing firms and thus augments productivity growth.
Abstract
The impact of public infrastructure investment on the productive performance of firms has been an important focus of the recent literature on productivity growth. The size of this impact has important implications for policymakers' decisions to invest in public capital, and productivity analysts' evaluation of productivity growth fluctuations and declines. However, detailed evaluation of the infrastructure impact is difficult using existing studies which rely on restricted models of firms' technology and behavior. In this paper we construct a more complete production theory model of firms' production and input decisions. We then apply our framework to state-level data on the output production and input (capital, nonproduction and production labor and energy) use of manufacturing firms to evaluate the contribution of infrastructure to firms' costs and productivity growth. We find that infrastructure investment does provide a significant direct benefit to manufacturing firms and thus augments productivity growth. We also show, however, that this evidence should be interpreted taking into account the social cost of such capital (which is not reflected in firms' costs), and the indirect impact resulting from scale effects.

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The composition of public expenditure and economic growth

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Policy Watch: Infrastructure Investment and Economic Growth

TL;DR: Munnell et al. as mentioned in this paper argued that much of the decline in U.S. productivity that occurred in the 1970s was precipitated by declining rates of public capital investment.
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Does Public Infrastructure Affect Economic Activity?: Evidence from the Rural Interstate Highway System

TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between large infrastructure spending, of the type implied by interstate highway construction, and the level of economic activity and found that highways have a differential impact across industries: certain industries grow as a result of reduced transportation costs, whereas others shrink as economic activity relocates.
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Infrastructure, long‐run economic growth and causality tests for cointegrated panels

TL;DR: The authors investigate the consequences of various types of infrastructure provision in a panel of countries from 1950 to 1992 and show that while infrastructure does tend to cause long-run economic growth, there is substantial variation across countries.
References
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Is public expenditure productive

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between aggregate productivity and stock and flow government-spending variables is investigated and the empirical results indicate that the non-military public capital stock is dramatically more important in determining productivity than is either the flow of nonmilitary or military spending, and that military capital bears little relation to productivity.
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The Practice of Econometrics: Classic and Contemporary.

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