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To measure subnational governments, only external money flows are counted, excluding intra-level transactions in measuring a level of government and all intergovernmental transactions in measuring general government. Control, finance, and administration should be distinguished in measuring centralization and each level’s share of general government, administered expenditures being net of grants given to other governments and financed expenditures net of grants received. Disparate decentralization of finance, control, and administration brings vertical imbalance, measured by the portion of a government’s expenditures not covered by its own resources and by the ratio of intergovernmental grants to total government expenditures.
Budgeting --- Public Finance --- Statistics --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General --- National Budget --- Budget Systems --- Data Collection and Data Estimation Methodology --- Computer Programs: Other --- Public finance & taxation --- Budgeting & financial management --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Expenditure --- Total expenditures --- Revenue administration --- General government spending --- Government finance statistics --- Public financial management (PFM) --- Economic and financial statistics --- Expenditures, Public --- Revenue --- Budget --- Finance --- United Kingdom
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In this paper, a simple methodology to assess the effectiveness of automatic stabilizers is proposed and empirically tested using French data for the period 1970-2000. The paper concludes that fiscal stabilizers have dampened output variability by approximately 35 45 percent depending on the measure of potential output used. In addition, the results indicate that fiscal stabilizers mainly operated through the reduction of private investment fluctuations from 1970 to 1985, and through the reduction of private consumption variability thereafter. Due to the counterfactual nature of the analysis performed, the simplicity of the theoretical model, and simultaneity issues that might introduce biases, the results can at most be interpreted as approximations of the phenomenon that is analyzed.
Budgeting --- Investments: General --- Macroeconomics --- Fiscal Policy --- Business Fluctuations --- Cycles --- Macroeconomics: Consumption --- Saving --- Wealth --- National Budget --- Budget Systems --- Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy --- Stabilization --- Treasury Policy --- Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions --- Investment --- Capital --- Intangible Capital --- Capacity --- Budgeting & financial management --- Private consumption --- General government spending --- Automatic stabilizers --- Disposable income --- Private investment --- National accounts --- Public financial management (PFM) --- Fiscal policy --- Consumption --- Economics --- Budget --- National income --- Saving and investment --- France
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Already in precarious shape, the financial health of India’s states took a turn for the worse in the late 1990s when state deficits and debt rose sharply. While India is among the world’s most decentralized economies, greater decentralization is not the root cause of this situation. Panel estimation techniques find evidence that the trend rise in deficits reflects problems of transfer dependence and moral hazard that undermine states’ incentives to control deficits.
Intergovernmental fiscal relations --- Budget deficits --- Fiscal policy --- Deficits, Budget --- Budget --- Deficit financing --- Budgeting --- Public Finance --- Taxation --- State and Local Government --- Intergovernmental Relations: General --- Intergovernmental Relations --- Federalism --- Secession --- Multiple or Simultaneous Equation Models: Models with Panel Data --- Fiscal Policy --- National Budget --- Budget Systems --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Debt --- Debt Management --- Sovereign Debt --- Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General --- Public finance & taxation --- Budgeting & financial management --- Expenditure --- General government spending --- Government debt management --- Tax incentives --- Budget planning and preparation --- Public financial management (PFM) --- Central government spending --- Expenditures, Public --- Debts, Public --- India
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In many countries the decentralization of spending responsibilities has outpaced the decentralization of revenue powers. Sub-national governments have then to rely on transfers from the center and borrowing to finance their spending. When this occurs, we find that the overall fiscal deficit tends to increase. This result is based on cross-country econometric evidence from OECD countries, and is particularly strong in the presence of regional disparities. Fiscal discipline can be strengthened by ensuring that sub-national taxing powers are adequate to meet spending obligations.
Expenditures, Public --- Fiscal policy --- Tax policy --- Taxation --- Economic policy --- Finance, Public --- Appropriations and expenditures --- Government appropriations --- Government expenditures --- Government spending --- Public expenditures --- Public spending --- Spending, Government --- Public administration --- Government spending policy --- Econometric models. --- Government policy --- Budgeting --- Macroeconomics --- Public Finance --- Structure, Scope, and Performance of Government --- National Deficit Surplus --- State and Local Government --- Intergovernmental Relations: General --- State and Local Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue --- State and Local Budget and Expenditures --- Intergovernmental Relations --- Federalism --- Secession --- Fiscal Policy --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- National Budget --- Budget Systems --- Debt --- Debt Management --- Sovereign Debt --- Public finance & taxation --- Budgeting & financial management --- Fiscal stance --- Expenditure --- General government spending --- Public debt --- Public financial management (PFM) --- Budget --- Debts, Public --- Australia
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This paper analyzes the impact of decentralization on overall fiscal performance in the European Union, taking into account fiscal institutional arrangements. We find that spending decentralization has been associated with sizably better fiscal performance, especially when transfer dependency of subnational governments is low. However, subnational fiscal rules do not seem to be associated with better performance.
Decentralization in government --- Fiscal policy --- Tax policy --- Taxation --- Economic policy --- Finance, Public --- Centralization in government --- Devolution in government --- Government centralization --- Government decentralization --- Government devolution --- Political science --- Central-local government relations --- Federal government --- Local government --- Public administration --- Econometric models. --- Government policy --- Budgeting --- Macroeconomics --- Public Finance --- State and Local Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue --- Intergovernmental Relations --- Federalism --- Secession --- Fiscal Policies and Behavior of Economic Agents: General --- Fiscal Policy --- National Budget --- Budget Systems --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Budgeting & financial management --- Public finance & taxation --- Fiscal rules --- Fiscal federalism --- Fiscal stance --- General government spending --- Expenditure --- Public financial management (PFM) --- Budget --- Expenditures, Public --- Denmark
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The purpose of this paper is to assess whether expenditure decentralization has contributed to weakening fiscal performance in Europe. Using a panel of EU15 countries for the period 1995-2011, we estimate three econometric models and ask the following questions: (1) does the form of spending decentralization affect the general government fiscal balance?; (2) is there evidence of spending duplication?; and (3) are soft budget constraints prevalent at the subnational level in Europe? Our results indicate that current decentralization models may have some shortcomings and efforts to achieve fiscal consolidation would require improvements in three areas: better matching subnational spending and revenues; reshaping some expenditure assignments to reduce overlap; and improving the effectiveness of institutional arrangements at the subnational level.
Budget --- Decentralization in government --- Fiscal policy --- Tax policy --- Taxation --- Economic policy --- Finance, Public --- Budgeting --- Expenditures, Public --- Government policy --- Forecasting --- International Monetary Fund. --- Internationaal monetair fonds --- International monetary fund --- Government spending policy --- Public spending policy --- Spending policy, Government --- Full employment policies --- Unfunded mandates --- E-books --- Macroeconomics --- Public Finance --- Structure, Scope, and Performance of Government --- National Deficit Surplus --- State and Local Government --- Intergovernmental Relations: General --- State and Local Budget and Expenditures --- Intergovernmental Relations --- Federalism --- Secession --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Fiscal Policy --- National Budget --- Budget Systems --- Public finance & taxation --- Budgeting & financial management --- Expenditure --- Fiscal federalism --- General government spending --- Fiscal stance --- Fiscal rules --- Public financial management (PFM) --- Ireland
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