02097nam 22003853u 450 991044994570332120210107012042.01-4175-2443-X(CKB)1000000000246996(EBL)3417106(OCoLC)923516137(MiAaPQ)EBC3417106(EXLCZ)99100000000024699620160718d2001|||| u|| |engState Enterprise Zone Programs[electronic resource] Have They Worked?Kalamazoo W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research20011 online resource (359 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-88099-250-6 Contents; Preface; 1 - Introduction; 2 - Enterprise Zones and Economic-Development Policy; 3 - How Valuable Are Zone Incentives to Firms?; 4 - How Taxes and Incentives Favor One Industry over Another and Capital over Labor; 5 - The Fiscal Effects of Incentives; 6 - Manufacturing Growth and Decline in Enterprise Zones; 7 - Enterprise Zones, Incentives, and Local Economic Growth; 8 - Enterprise Zones and Access to Employment; 9 - Conclusions and Policy Recommendations; Appendix A: Details of the TAIM(ez) ModelAppendix B: Do High-Unemployment Places Have Lower Business Taxes? A Comparison of Results from TAIM and TAIM(ez)Appendix C: The Tax Elasticity of Employment and Fiscal Break-Even; Appendix D: The SSEL Data; Appendix E: Translating Enterprise Zone Boundaries and Tax Characteristics of Zones; Appendix F: Detailed Results; Appendix G: Gravity-Based Commuting Models; Appendix H: Enterprise Zones and Commuting; References; The Authors; Subject Index; About the InstituteEnterprise zonesElectronic books.Enterprise zones.307.3/42Peters Allan938420Fisher Peter938421AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910449945703321State Enterprise Zone Programs2114258UNINA