Local Accountability and National Coordination in Fiscal Federalism: A Fine Balance

Author:   Charles R. Hankla ,  Jorge Martinez-Vazquez ,  Raúl A. Ponce Rodríguez
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
ISBN:  

9781788972161


Pages:   232
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Format:   Hardback
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Local Accountability and National Coordination in Fiscal Federalism: A Fine Balance


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Author:   Charles R. Hankla ,  Jorge Martinez-Vazquez ,  Raúl A. Ponce Rodríguez
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Imprint:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
ISBN:  

9781788972161


ISBN 10:   1788972163
Pages:   232
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Contents: 1. Introduction: Decentralization and Parties 2. Building the Theory: Majoritarian Electoral Systems and Party Integration 3. Building the Theory: Majoritarian Electoral Systems and Non-Integrated Parties 4. Building the Theory: Proportional Representation and Closed Party Lists 5. Building the Theory: Proportional Representation and Open Party Lists 6. Decentralization and Integrated Parties: Summarizing the Models 7. Empirically Testing the Role of Political Institutions 8. Two Comparative Case Studies: Political Parties and Local Governance in Nigeria and Senegal 9. Conclusion: A Fine Balance Bibliography Index

Reviews

`In early work on federalism, economists and political scientists had rather distinct concerns and approaches. Second-generation theory then offered a more realistic political economy account of incentives in federal systems. This book goes further and explicitly integrates political and economic dimensions. The result is a major advance in our understanding of the political conditions that underpin decentralized service delivery.' -- Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK `This volume by leading scholars, Hankla, Martinez-Vazquez and Ponce Rodriguez, makes a path breaking contribution in advancing our knowledge on decentralized governance by providing a comprehensive theoretical and empirical framework on the impact of political institutions on the provision of local public goods. The volume will hopefully re-invigorate scholarship on the third generation of fiscal federalism i.e. addressing the interaction of political institutions with fiscal and administrative institutions on equity and efficiency of public goods under decentralized governance.' -- Anwar Shah, Brookings Institution, The World Bank, US and Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, China 'Does fiscal decentralization really work? More to the point, under what specific conditions will decentralization actually deliver the gains that are often attributed to bringing government closer to the people ? It is this second and fundamental question that Charles R. Hankla, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Raul Alberto Ponce Rodriguez examine in their masterly new treatise. They start with the standard Oates' decentralization theorem , but they recognize the limits of this theorem in real-world political (and economic) environments. So, in a series of chapters that utilize the latest in sophisticated theoretical modeling, they extend the standard framework to incorporate considerations that reflect the key underlying realities of political institutions, especially democratic decentralization and party integration . Their main conclusion is that democratic decentralization can produce the benefits predicted by Oates, but only when parties are integrated. They then test their framework in several empirical chapters, with results that largely confirm their theory. Their treatise is essential reading for anyone wanting both to understand decentralization and, more importantly, to design real-world institutions that can achieve the gains from decentralization.' -- James Alm, National Tax Association and Tulane University, US


`In early work on federalism, economists and political scientists had rather distinct concerns and approaches. Second-generation theory then offered a more realistic political economy account of incentives in federal systems. This book goes further and explicitly integrates political and economic dimensions. The result is a major advance in our understanding of the political conditions that underpin decentralized service delivery.' -- Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK `This volume by leading scholars, Hankla, Martinez-Vazquez and Ponce Rodriguez, makes a path breaking contribution in advancing our knowledge on decentralized governance by providing a comprehensive theoretical and empirical framework on the impact of political institutions on the provision of local public goods. The volume will hopefully re-invigorate scholarship on the third generation of fiscal federalism i.e. addressing the interaction of political institutions with fiscal and administrative institutions on equity and efficiency of public goods under decentralized governance.' -- Anwar Shah, Brookings Institution, World Bank, Washington, DC and Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, China 'Does fiscal decentralization really work? More to the point, under what specific conditions will decentralization actually deliver the gains that are often attributed to bringing government closer to the people ? It is this second and fundamental question that Charles R. Hankla, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Raul Alberto Ponce Rodriguez examine in their masterly new treatise. They start with the standard Oates' decentralization theorem , but they recognize the limits of this theorem in real-world political (and economic) environments. So, in a series of chapters that utilize the latest in sophisticated theoretical modeling, they extend the standard framework to incorporate considerations that reflect the key underlying realities of political institutions, especially democratic decentralization and party integration . Their main conclusion is that democratic decentralization can produce the benefits predicted by Oates, but only when parties are integrated. They then test their framework in several empirical chapters, with results that largely confirm their theory. Their treatise is essential reading for anyone wanting both to understand decentralization and, more importantly, to design real-world institutions that can achieve the gains from decentralization.' -- James Alm, National Tax Association and Tulane University, US


`In early work on federalism, economists and political scientists had rather distinct concerns and approaches. Second-generation theory then offered a more realistic political economy account of incentives in federal systems. This book goes further and explicitly integrates political and economic dimensions. The result is a major advance in our understanding of the political conditions that underpin decentralized service delivery.' -- Joachim Wehner, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK `This volume by leading scholars, Hankla, Martinez-Vazquez and Ponce Rodriguez, makes a path breaking contribution in advancing our knowledge on decentralized governance by providing a comprehensive theoretical and empirical framework on the impact of political institutions on the provision of local public goods. The volume will hopefully re-invigorate scholarship on the third generation of fiscal federalism i.e. addressing the interaction of political institutions with fiscal and administrative institutions on equity and efficiency of public goods under decentralized governance.' -- Anwar Shah, Brookings Institution, World Bank, Washington, DC, US and Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, China 'Does fiscal decentralization really work? More to the point, under what specific conditions will decentralization actually deliver the gains that are often attributed to bringing government closer to the people ? It is this second and fundamental question that Charles R. Hankla, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Raul Alberto Ponce Rodriguez examine in their masterly new treatise. They start with the standard Oates' decentralization theorem , but they recognize the limits of this theorem in real-world political (and economic) environments. So, in a series of chapters that utilize the latest in sophisticated theoretical modeling, they extend the standard framework to incorporate considerations that reflect the key underlying realities of political institutions, especially democratic decentralization and party integration . Their main conclusion is that democratic decentralization can produce the benefits predicted by Oates, but only when parties are integrated. They then test their framework in several empirical chapters, with results that largely confirm their theory. Their treatise is essential reading for anyone wanting both to understand decentralization and, more importantly, to design real-world institutions that can achieve the gains from decentralization.' -- James Alm, National Tax Association and Tulane University, US


Author Information

Charles R. Hankla, Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of Governance Programs, International Center for Public Policy, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, Emeritus Regents Professor of Economics and founding Director, Public Finance Research Cluster and International Center for Public Policy, Georgia State University, Atlanta, US and Raúl Alberto Ponce Rodríguez, Professor of Economics, Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez, Mexico

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