TY - BOOK ID - 1162727 TI - Fiscal federalism : quantitative studies AU - Rosen, Harvey S. AU - National Bureau of Economic Research. PY - 1988 SN - 0226726193 9786611431075 1281431079 0226726231 9780226726236 PB - Chicago : University of Chicago Press, DB - UniCat KW - Public finance KW - United States KW - Intergovernmental fiscal relations KW - -336.2 (73) KW - AA / International- internationaal KW - US / United States of America - USA - Verenigde Staten - Etats Unis KW - 321.68 KW - 336.61 KW - 336.53 KW - Papers presented at a conference held at Halloran House in New York City, 10-11 April 1987. KW - NBB congres KW - Federal-state fiscal relations KW - Fiscal relations, Intergovernmental KW - State-local fiscal relations KW - Federal government KW - Finance, Public KW - Local finance KW - Belastingsakkoorden. Belastingswezen--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA KW - Federalisme. KW - Financieel beleid. KW - Financiƫle betrekkingen tussen het rijk, de provincies en de gemeenten. KW - Law and legislation KW - 336.2 (73) Belastingen. Belastingswezen. Openbare financien. Belastingspolitiek. Belastingstheorie. Belastingsharmonisatie. Fiskale politiek. Belastingsleer. Belastingsdruk. Belastingstechniek. Belastingsstelsel.Belastingstarief--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA KW - 336.2 (73) Belastingsakkoorden. Belastingswezen--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA KW - Belastingen. Belastingswezen. Openbare financien. Belastingspolitiek. Belastingstheorie. Belastingsharmonisatie. Fiskale politiek. Belastingsleer. Belastingsdruk. Belastingstechniek. Belastingsstelsel.Belastingstarief--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA KW - Papers presented at a conference held at Halloran House in New York City, 10-11 April 1987 KW - 336.2 (73) KW - Congresses KW - Federalisme KW - Financiƫle betrekkingen tussen het rijk, de provincies en de gemeenten KW - Financieel beleid KW - Fiscal policies KW - E-books KW - policy, taxation, public finance, decentralization, power, government, local, state, federal grants, congress, debt, revenue, expenditure, equilibrium model, deductibility, intergovernmental fiscal relations, municipal budget, economics, economy, taxes, income, spending, administration, nonfiction, funding, legislation, assistance. KW - United States of America UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:1162727 AB - We often think of fiscal decisions as being made by a single government, but in the United States the reality is that an astounding number of entities have the power to tax and spend. State, local, and federal governments all play crucial roles in the U.S. fiscal system, and the interrelation has been the source of continuing controversy. This fact is the focus of the seven papers and commentaries presented in this volume, the result of a conference sponsored by the NBER. The contributors use various quantitative tools to study policy issues, obtaining results that will interest policymakers and researchers working in the areas of taxation and public finance. The first three papers study the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government. John Joseph Wallis and Wallace E. Oates look at the extend and evolution of decentralization in the state and local sector; Robert P. Inman examines the growth of federal grants and the structure of congressional decision making; and Jeffrey S. Zax investigates the effects of the number of government jurisdictions on aggregate local public debt and expenditures. The next three papers look at the deductibility of state and local taxes on federal tax returns. Using an econometric analysis, Douglas Holtz-Eakin and Harvey S. Rosen examine the effects of deductibility on revenue sources and level of expenditures. Lawrence B. Lindsey looks at how deductibility affects the level and type of taxation. George R. Zodrow uses a two-sector general equilibrium model to investigate revenue effects of deductibility. Finally, Charles R. Hulten and Robert M. Schwab analyze the problem of developing an accurate estimate of income for the state and local sector, finding that conventional accounting procedures have underestimated the income generated by a startling ER -