Does Agriculture Generate Local Economic Spillovers? Short-Run and Long-Run Evidence from the Ogallala Aquifer

Author:

Hornbeck Richard1,Keskin Pinar2

Affiliation:

1. Harvard University, Littauer Center 232, Cambridge, MA 02138 (e-mail: )

2. Department of Economics, Wellesley College, 106 Central Street, Wellesley, MA 02481 (e-mail: )

Abstract

Agriculture may support the local nonagricultural economy in rural areas, though agricultural expansion may also crowd-out nonagricultural activity. On the United States Plains, areas over the Ogallala aquifer experienced windfall agricultural gains when post-WWII technologies increased farmers' access to groundwater. Comparing counties over the Ogallala with similar counties, nonagricultural sectors experienced only short-run relative benefits. Despite substantial and persistent agricultural gains, there was no long-run relative expansion of nonagricultural sectors in Ogallala counties. Agricultural development may still encourage regional or national nonagricultural development, but agriculture does not appear to generate local economic spillovers that differentially encourage local nonagricultural activity. (JEL Q12, Q15, Q18, Q25, R11)

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance

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