Affiliation:
1. Providence College, USA
2. Mercatus Center at George Mason University, USA
Abstract
Using a variety of novel data sources from the RegData project, we show that population levels and the amount of regulation are highly correlated across countries and time, and that more-populated US states, Australian states and Canadian provinces tend to be more heavily regulated
than less-populated states and provinces. A doubling of population size is associated with a 22 to 33 per cent increase in regulation. This provides support for the theory that the fixed costs associated with regulating partly determine where and when regulations occur.
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Public Administration
Cited by
4 articles.
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