The power of the purse : what do the data say on US federal budget allocation to the states?

Carregando...
Imagem de Miniatura
Data
2004-08-13

Orientador(res)

Métricas

Título da Revista

ISSN da Revista

Título de Volume

Resumo
This paper provides new evidence on the determinants of the allocation of the US federal budget to the states and tests the capability of congressional, electoral and partisan theories to explain such allocation. We find that socio-economic characteristics are important explanatory variables but are not sufficient to explain the disparities in the distribution of federal monies. First, prestige committee membership is not conducive to pork-barrelling. We do not find any evidence that marginal states receive more funding; on the opposite, safe states tend to be rewarded. Also, states that are historically 'swing' in presidential elections tend to receive more funds. Finally, we find strong evidence supporting partisan theories of budget allocation. States whose governor has the same political affiliation of the President receive more federal funds; while states whose representatives belong to a majority opposing the president party receive less funds.

Descrição

Palavras-chave

Área do Conhecimento

Avaliação

Revisão

Suplementado Por

Referenciado Por