A fiscal federalism approach to infrastructure policy

Regional Science and Urban Economics - Tập 27 - Trang 139-159 - 1997
Charles R. Hulten1,2, Robert M. Schwab1
1Department of Economics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
2National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

Tài liệu tham khảo

Arthur, 1990, Positive feedbacks in the economy, Scientific American, 262 Aschauer, 1989, Is public expenditure productive?, Journal of Monetary Economics, 23 Aschauer, 1991 Becker, 1983, A theory of competition among pressure groups for political influence, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 98 Brennan, 1977, Towards a tax constitution for Leviathan, Journal of Public Economics, 7 Breton, 1965, A theory of government grants, The Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, 31 Chernick, 1979, An economic model of the distribution of project grants Coase, 1960, The problem of social cost, Journal of Law and Economics, 3 Coate, 1995, On the form of transfers to special interests, Journal of Political Economy, 103 Congressional Budget Office, 1988 Congressional Budget Office, 1992 Crihfield, J.B. and M.P.H. Panggabean, Growth and convergence in U.S. cities, Journal of Urban Economics, forthcoming. Cromwell, 1991, Public sector maintenance: The case of local mass-transit, National Tax Journal, XLIV Del Rossi, 1994 Freeman, 1990, Water pollution policy Gordon, 1991, Do tax-exempt bonds really subsidize municipal capital?, National Tax Journal, XLIV Holtz-Eakin, 1993, Correspondence, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 7 Holtz-Eakin, 1994, Public sector capital and the productivity puzzle, Review of Economics and Statistics, LXXVI Holtz-Eakin, 1994 Hulten, 1993, Infrastructure spending: Where do we go from here?, National Tax Journal, 46 Hulten, 1991, A Haig-Simons-Tiebout comprehensive income tax, National Tax Journal, 44 Kelejian, 1994 Krugman, 1991 McGuire, 1991, Federal aid to states and localities and the appropriate competitive framework Mueller, 1989, II Munnell, 1992, Policy watch: Infrastructure investment and economic growth, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 6 Oates, 1972 Oates, W.E. and R.M. Schwab, The allocative and distributive implications of local fiscal competition, in: Daphne Kenyon, ed., Interjurisdictional tax and policy competition (Urban Institute Press, Washington). Oates, 1988, Economic competition among jurisdictions: Efficiency enhancing or distortion inducing?, Journal of Public Economics, 35 Olson, 1969, The principle of ‘fiscal equivalence’: The division of responsibilities among different levels of government, American Economic Review, 55 Sanders, 1993, What infrastructure crisis?, The Public Interest Tullock, 1983 U.S. General Accounting Office, 1983 Wittman, 1989, Why democracies produce efficient results, Journal of Political Economy, 97