1. Regional Allocation of Public Funds for Economic Development.
- Author
-
Stewart Jr., Charles T.
- Subjects
REGIONAL economics ,ECONOMIC indicators ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PROSPECTING costs ,DEVELOPED countries ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
The article reports that new Federal programs for regional economic development stress productivity as a criterion for the regional allocation of Federal funds. What have been surveyed turns out to be a sizeable number of partial indicants of growth potential in employment, differing in numerous ways. All the data might be described as indicants of disequilibrium, with equilibrium attainable by growth in employment. But in some cases, such as local market deficiencies, the likely amount of employment growth can be roughly estimated. In others, such as a positive competitive shift or high rates of return on investment, only investigation of area and industry in some depth could hope to provide an estimate of the employment increment resulting in equilibrium. The various indicants in combination complement and reinforce one another. All they can do, however, is serve as criteria for partitioning all defined areas into several groups, offering respectively much better and much poorer growth prospects. For such subgroups of widely differing prospects it is possible to say that federal development expenditures of an incremental nature would have greater payoffs in one than in another.
- Published
- 1967
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