Local Politics and the Demand for Public Education

Author:

Colburn Christopher B.1,Horowitz John B.2

Affiliation:

1. Economics Department, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia 23529, USA.

2. Economics Department, Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana 47306, USA.

Abstract

This paper expands on the school finance literature by using a political fragmentation index to calculate how political power affects educational spending in Virginia, USA. The methodology allows the comparison of different political voices relative to each other and the consideration of the role of the distribution of political power. Political fragmentation is considered across several different dimensions, including race, age, income and political parties. Using a demand for local public goods model, it is found that, along with traditional demand variables, the interest-group pressures dominated by the primary beneficiaries (teachers and students) increase educational spending while higher income and a larger percentage of African-Americans in the population reduce educational spending.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

Reference43 articles.

1. Ashenfelter, O. and Rouse, C. (2000) Schooling, intelligence and income in America, reprinted in: K. J. Arrow, S. Bowles and S. N. Durlouf (Eds) Meritocracy and Economic Inequality, pp. 89-117. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

2. Berne, R. and Stiefel, L. (1999) Concepts of school finance equity: 1970 to the present, in: H. F. Ladd, R. Chalk and J. S. Hansen (Eds) Equity and Adequacy in Education Finance: Issues and Perspectives, pp. 7-33. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

3. Bernier, L.L. and Bingham, R.D. (1989) Budgetary stress and urban fiscal management: a longitudinal perspective, in: T. N. Clark , W. Lyons and M. R. Fitzgerald (Eds) Research in Urban Policy, Vol. 3 , pp. 165-190. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.

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