THE IMPACT OF LOCAL DECENTRALIZATION ON ECONOMIC GROWTH: EVIDENCE FROM U.S. COUNTIES* |
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Authors: | George W. Hammond Mehmet S. Tosun |
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Affiliation: | 1. Bureau of Business and Economic Research, Department of Economics, College of Business and Economics, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506‐6025. E‐mail: ghammond@wvu.edu;2. Department of Economics, University of Nevada, Reno, Mail Stop 0030, Reno, Nevada, 89557‐0030;3. and Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), Bonn, Germany. E‐mail: tosun@unr.edu |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT We analyze the impact of fiscal decentralization on U.S. county population, employment, and real income growth. Our findings suggest that government organization matters for local economic growth, but that the impacts vary by government unit and by economic indicator. We find that single‐purpose governments per square mile have a positive impact on metropolitan population and employment growth, but no significant impact on nonmetropolitan counties. In contrast, the fragmentation of general‐purpose governments per capita has a negative impact on employment and population growth in nonmetropolitan counties. Our results suggest that local government decentralization matters differently for metropolitan and nonmetropolitan counties. |
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