Abstract
This study aims to examine the impact of local government fiscal
expenditure on employment in Taiwan and to investigate whether such effects
exhibit spatial spillovers. Employment is a crucial foundation for economic
development and social stability, and understanding how fiscal expenditure
influences the labor market provides valuable implications for policymaking.
Using panel data from 22 counties and cities in Taiwan covering the period
2000–2023, with data obtained from the Directorate General of Budget,
Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS), this study constructs a contiguity-based
spatial weight matrix. The empirical tests reveal that the Spatial Durbin Model
(SDM) provides greater explanatory power than the Spatial Lag Model (SLM) and
the Spatial Error Model (SEM). The SDM with spatial and time fixed effects is
ultimately adopted, followed by an effects decomposition analysis. The results
indicate that expenditures on education, science, and culture, as well as
economic development, have stable and positive impacts on employment,
accompanied by significant spillover effects. Pension and retirement benefits
expenditures also exert positive effects. In contrast, general administrative
expenditures show negative impacts, while social welfare expenditures have
positive local effects but negative spillovers to neighboring regions.
Community development and environmental protection expenditures mainly
contribute through positive externalities.
JEL classification
numbers: C33, C21, E62.
Keywords: Fiscal expenditure, Employment,
Spatial spillover effects, Spatial Durbin Model.