Industrial clusters, asymmetric information and policy design
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Date
2002-12Metadata
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- Discussion papers (SAM) [673]
Abstract
Recently there has been some attention on the issue of industrial clusters and
industrial policy claiming that there are arguments in favour of subsidising special
industries in order to stimulate industrial agglomeration. An important objection
against such a selective industrial policy is that the government needs full information
about the industries to be able to pick the winners. But often the government does not
know whether the industry is a cluster or not. If the policy towards a cluster is more
favourable than the policy towards other industries, all industries will have incentives
to allege to be clusters. The problem for the government is to identify the true clusters
from the ordinary industries. This paper attempts to shed some light on the problem of
industrial policy and industrial clusters when there is asymmetric information between
the government and the industry. We show that a subsidy contingent of a certain activity level will create a separating equilibrium.
Publisher
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Department of EconomicsSeries
Discussion paper2002:25