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Small Business Property Tax Reductions and Firm Productivity
Author(s)
Date Issued
2024
Date Available
2024-05-07T12:12:24Z
Abstract
We investigate the productivity spillovers from the UK government’s decision to use extensive property tax reductions as a key instrument to stimulate innovation in smaller businesses and drive local growth. To capture the complex interaction and clustering of hierarchical effects, we apply non-parametric Random Effects Expectation Maximisation algorithm that complements more standard econometric estimators, namely matching to control for endogeneity and control functions to estimate total factor productivity. These approaches enabled us to incorporate various contextual configurations in comparing the recipients of these reductions to non-recipients with regard to productivity, in which the UK has experienced a considerably worse performance than its peers since the great recession. Contrary to policy assumptions and business community expectations, we show that generic tax reductions, when significant, are mostly associated with lower productivity and thus have been unsuitably chosen as a policy mechanism to stimulate productivity growth. We further show how instruments that are not built for causality could be beneficial for policy evaluation.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Small Business Economics
Volume
62
Start Page
307
End Page
324
Copyright (Published Version)
2023 The Authors
Classification
C55
D22
H23
H25
D24
O43
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0921-898X
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
REVISIONS 6.2.2023.docx
Size
1.88 MB
Format
Microsoft Word XML
Checksum (MD5)
1e56468b577ab9241a4226bbdcac95b5
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