You are here :: Home » Research Initiatives » Working Papers » Fiscal Spillovers between Local Governments

Working Paper No. 2007 | 10

Fiscal Spillovers between Local Governments: Keeping up with the Joneses' School District

by Randall Reback (Barnard Economics)

Although there is a large theoretical literature concerning tax and expenditure competition between local governments, there is relatively little empirical evidence concerning whether such competition actually occurs. In the context of U.S. public school districts, the fiscal behavior of one district could affect the revenue decisions of other, nearby districts. Using financial and geographic data for every school district in the U.S. from 1972 to 2002, this paper estimates the magnitude of fiscal spillovers between districts. The results confirm that districts' revenues are influenced by exogenous shocks in their neighbors' revenues, especially for districts that are already outspending their neighbors. A one dollar increase in the mean revenues per pupil of nearby districts leads to about a 20 cent increase in a districtÂ's own revenues per pupil. These results have important implications for the optimal design of school finance programs.

Download PDF

Syndicated News Feed

ISERP

Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy

Columbia University
International Affairs Building

420 West 118th Street
8th Floor, Mail Code 3355
New York, New York 10027

Tel. 212-854-3081
Fax 212-854-8925
iserp@columbia.edu

www.iserp.columbia.edu