Abstract

Simplistic treatment of infrastructure during regional modeling often produces erroneous results and potentially wrong policy prescriptions. This paper attempts to address this issue and proposes a non-linear formulation for a productivity index in which infrastructure and economic mass (to reflect degree of agglomeration economies) of a region enter as interacting variables. The formulation is numerically tested to examine the effect of infrastructure investment at different level of agglomeration. Finally, the productivity index is used as a part of Constant Elasticity of Substitution (CES) production function, and the model is validated through estimation and calibration techniques using time-series data of Japan's regions. The validated formulation for productivity index, which realistically encompass the role of infrastructure, can potentially be utilized to assess the dynamic impacts of infrastructure in a multiregional context. The result is theoretically robust and practically useful for policy making particularly in developing Asian countries.

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