Fiscal stress and the alocation of expenditure responsabilities between state and local governments : an exploratory study
By: JIMENEZ, Benedict Salazar.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Georgia : Carl Vinson Institute of Government of the University of Geogia, 2009State and Local Government Review 41, 2, p. 81-94Abstract: Does fiscal stress at the state level reduce state governments expenditure responsabilities vis-à-vis the local public sector? If so, what functional responsabilities are implicity devolved to local governments or centralized at the state level as a consequence of declinig state fiscal condition? This study draws upon 26 years of cross-state data to examine the inter-governmental dimension of state fiscal stress. Three general framework - fiscal federalism, the politics (or interest group) perspective, and the organizational model of fiscal slack - are used to explain how fiscal condition of states can affect state-local fiscal relations.Does fiscal stress at the state level reduce state governments expenditure responsabilities vis-à-vis the local public sector? If so, what functional responsabilities are implicity devolved to local governments or centralized at the state level as a consequence of declinig state fiscal condition? This study draws upon 26 years of cross-state data to examine the inter-governmental dimension of state fiscal stress. Three general framework - fiscal federalism, the politics (or interest group) perspective, and the organizational model of fiscal slack - are used to explain how fiscal condition of states can affect state-local fiscal relations.
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