The Strange Disappearance of Investment in Human and Physical Capital in the United States

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Witko, Christopher; Newmark, Adam J.
署名单位:
University of North Carolina; Appalachian State University; Saint Louis University
刊物名称:
JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION RESEARCH AND THEORY
ISSN/ISSBN:
1053-1858
DOI:
10.1093/jopart/mun037
发表日期:
2010
页码:
215-232
关键词:
american-states political-economy MODEL RACE determinants COMPETITION priorities tradeoffs education POLICY
摘要:
Many scholars have argued that there are strong incentives for states to spend less money on redistributive or consumption programs, such as welfare, and more on developmental or investment programs, such as highways. Yet, over the last few decades, the proportion of state budgets allocated to expenditures intended to develop human and physical capital, specifically education and highways, has declined. In real terms, spending on virtually every government program has increased but expenditure increases to redistributive programs have been much greater than those to investment programs. Why this shift has happened despite theory predicting the contrary has not been adequately examined in a way that considers multiple developmental programs and multiple ways of conceptualizing spending over a substantial time period. We undertake this task in the following article using a large, cross-sectional time series data set of state budgeting toward K-12 education, higher education, and highways from 1965 to 2004. We test competing theories of the determinants of state spending using these data and then discuss the factors that we believe have led to the relative de-emphasis on developmental programs. We find that the most consistent predictors of state developmental spending patterns are federal grants, the state of the economy, and interstate and intrastate competition.
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