Description/Abstract

Land-based revenues as a fiscal instrument to finance infrastructure tie public investment to real estate markets, where demand fluctuations cause fiscal consequences. This paper takes policy reversals as structural breaks and examines their impacts on infrastructure investment. We dissect China’s 2016 policy reversal that disallowed developers to finance land purchase with debt, causing sharp declines in local government land revenues, slashing their fiscal base for infrastructure investment. Using prefecture-level panel data and continuous difference-in-differences identification, we estimate the reversal reduced land-lease revenues by 55%. Two-stage least squares estimates suggest a 10% land-revenue decline translates into 6.6% investment reduction. Decomposing the funding sources show that 70% of the decline stems from contractions in local self-financing and borrowings by local financing vehicles, and resource reallocations within these financing vehicles amplify the impacts of the structural break. The lesson is: policy regime stability is vital to fiscal systems that rely on land-based revenues.

Document Type

Working Paper

Date

1-7-2026

Keywords

Land finance, infrastructure investment, credit crunch, local government financing vehicles, implicit debt

Language

English

Series

Working Papers Series

Disciplines

Finance and Financial Management | Infrastructure | Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration | Public Policy

ISSN

1525-3066

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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