State-Local Relations

State-Local Relations
Author: Joseph F. Zimmerman
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1995-08-30
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0313390924

This is a revision and update of Zimmerman's classic study of relations between state and local government. The first edition, published in 1983, was based on three decades of research into intergovernmental affairs and examined the legal, financial, and structural foundations of state-local relations. This new edition adds a fourth decade of research and brings the work up to date through the early 1990s, adding a chapter on state mandates and local governments, reviewing and analyzing the changes in fortune of state and local governments, and the impact of those changes on their relations between each other and between themselves and the federal government.

Equal Educational Opportunity

Equal Educational Opportunity
Author: United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Equal Educational Opportunity
Publisher:
Total Pages: 178
Release: 1970
Genre: Segregation in education
ISBN:

Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations

Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations
Author: Ronald C. Fisher
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 310
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9401153523

The main objective of this book is to restate the important theories and evidence from economic analysis concerning intergovernmental fiscal issues. More importantly, the second objective of the book is to identify gaps in knowledge, empirical uncertainties, and missing theoretical structures and then to establish a preliminary agenda for new research on this topic. The book is organized in two sections. The first covers the core body of intergovernmental fiscal relations, including optimal size for jurisdictions and assignment of public sector functions, the formulation and execution of tax policy in an intergovernmental setting, and the appropriate structure and use of intergovernmental transfers. In the second section, the core knowledge is applied to four major policy areas: education, welfare, fiscal interaction in urban areas, and economic development. In thinking about a new research agenda, the authors call for more current and authoritative estimates of fiscal incidence, including interjurisdictional spillovers, for more fundamental research about the federation process and effects of consolidation, for new evidence about the long run, general equilibrium effects of interjurisdictional competition, and for basic research about the choice process and establishment of intergovernmental fiscal institutions and policies by federal and subnational governments.