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Published byVincent Stephens Modified over 8 years ago
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Fiscal Organization of Metropolitan Areas in the U.S. In general, highly fragmented School districts, municipalities, special districts, counties, and cities. Of big cities, 25 have consolidated city- couty governments
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But consolidated city does not imply metropolitan city! Take the example of Baltimore
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Older Central Cities in the U.S. are at a strong competitive disadvantage relative to their suburbs.
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Detroit: Largest municipal bankruptcy. 1. Declining Economic base and tax revenue 2. Overlapping gov’ts not important 3. Decline in State Aid 4. Fiscal Imprudence
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Contrast Detroit with Buffalo, NY State aid replaced declining tax revenues Implicit tax on NYC metro area to fund declining upstate NY
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No significant metropolitan governments. No trend toward metropolitan consolidation. Fiscal Arrangements and Fiscal Policy City-County: consolidated? School Districts: Independent or dependent, city or county? Special Districts Vary in importance
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In cities with independent school districts (own taxing authority), municipal government relies more on charges than in cities with dependent school districts
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General Revenue held up better in great recession in cities with dependent school districts.
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Regression Analysis of FISC spending, overall and by function Effect of Population (Economies of scale) Effect of Intergovernmental Grants
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Population Effect: positive overall, positive for all functions except education and administration Intergovernmental Grants are Stimulative $1 of state aid leads to $1.29 spending increase $1 of federal aid leads to $2.3 of additional spending
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The Great Recession and the fiscal response of cities
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