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A Unitary Model of Local Taxation and Expenditure Policies in the United States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2009

Extract

Two models of local policy formation can be set forth. Although they are complementary rather than competing models, for heuristic purposes it is useful to present them as contrasting approaches. Since the first, the bargaining model, is well known, I shall concentrate in this paper on elaborating and applying a second, unitary model of policy making. The paper is divided into four main parts. After briefly identifying the limitations of the bargaining model, the first part develops the theoretical rationale for the unitary model. The second part uses the model to analyse empirically differences in the revenue sources for national, state and local governments. Part 3 does the same for expenditure policies, and, in the course of the analysis, distinguishes among three types of public policy – developmental, allocational and redistributive. In the final part, hypotheses deduced from the model are tested by means of a regression analysis of state and local expenditures.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1979

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References

1 Classic examples of the bargaining literature include Dahl, Robert, Who Governs? (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1961)Google Scholar, Banfield, Edward, Political Influence (New York: Free Press, 1961)Google Scholar and Agger, Robert, Goldrich, Daniel and Swanson, Bert, The Rulers and the Ruled (New York: Wiley, 1964).Google Scholar

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7 My approach is quite different. From the perspective of the unitary model, political variables are assumed to be unimportant. State and local units of government are presumed to be unitary systems that rationally respond to environmental conditions with policies that maximize their economic well-being. To test the model the relative importance of various environmental variables is examined; political variables are left out of the equation altogether. Therefore, it is appropriate to use findings from research that has solved the unit-of-analysis problem by aggregating the combined expenditures of state and local governments at the state level. I discuss these methodological issues in greater detail in ‘The Politics of Taxation and Expenditure: A Unitary Approach’ (paper presented at the meeting of the American Political Science Association, New York City, 09 1978, Appendix A).Google Scholar

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18 Even this may not be the correct way of making the point unless one takes into account both direct and indirect contributions to tax coffers. A local firm may be exempt from any direct local taxes, but it may nonetheless be important to the local economy and thus indirectly a most important taxpayer. Were it to leave the community, the fiscal resources of the area would be adversely affected.

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26 I have included general control expenditures among the housekeeping services of government, and it is this that accounts for the 3·8 per cent of federal expenditures on allocational activities.

27 State and local government deficit spending does not have the counter-cyclical effects that federal deficits are expected to have. See Hansen, Alvin H. and Perloff, Harvey S., State and Local Finance in the National Economy (New York: Norton, 1944)Google Scholar; Sharp, Ansel M., ‘The Behaviour of Selected State and Local Government Fiscal Variables during the Phases of the Cycles, 1949–1961’, Proceedings of the National Tax Association (1965), 599613Google Scholar; and Rafuse, Robert W. Jr., ‘Cyclical Behavior of State-Local Finances’, in Musgrave, Richard A., ed., Essays in Fiscal Federalism (Washington, DC.: Brookings, 1965)Google Scholar. Consequently, it is not appropriate to classify local interest payments as expenditures for developmental policies unless the project that the debt financed ‘paid for itself’.

28 I have discussed this problem more fully in ‘Equality, Efficiency and Big City Schools’, a paper presented at the meeting of the American Educational Research Association, San Francisco, April 1979. In that paper I conclude that education is a marginally redistributive policy area.

29 Thus, variations among states in expenditures as a percentage of state income is much less than variation in expenditures uncontrolled for income differences. In 1973, for example, state and local monies spent on public services as a percentage of the personal income earned by state residents varied only modestly. The coefficient of variation was ·12. By contrast the coefficient of variation for expenditure per capita (uncontrolled for income differences) was a substantial ·36. When federal aid was included, this coefficient declined only slightly to ·32 (data computed from Maxwell, James A. and Aronson, Richard, Financing State and Local Governments (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1977)Google Scholar, Tables A–7, A–9).

30 A discussion of methodological problems can be found in Peterson, , ‘The Politics of Taxation and Expenditure’, Appendix A.Google Scholar

31 The hypotheses are also supported by many other studies of expenditure policies. Although these studies have been cast within other conceptual frameworks, their specific findings, when placed within the framework of the unitary model, yield patterns of correlation similar to those reported here. Space precludes presentation of this supporting evidence; see Peterson, , ‘The Politics of Taxation and Expenditure’Google Scholar and Peterson, Paul E., City Limits, in preparation.Google Scholar

32 I explore the many implications of these and other findings generated by the unitary model in Peterson, , City Limits.Google Scholar

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