Affiliation:
1. Rikkyo University, Toshima-ku, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract
This article examines whether or not municipal mergers change the perceived level of public services within a merged municipality. I argue that residents of small municipalities that merge with larger neighbors lose political powers after the mergers; they become a minority within a merged municipality, and their electoral importance declines accordingly. As a result, the level of public services to the merged localities is expected to decrease. I test this argument by focusing on the nationwide concurrence of municipal mergers in Japan that rapidly took place in the 2000s. I conducted a survey of voters in rural municipalities that merged and those that remained intact during this wave of mergers. Using the responses to the survey, I demonstrate that the level of public services, as perceived by the respondents, declined more significantly in municipalities with mergers than in municipalities without.
Funder
MacMillan Center at Yale University
Council on East Asian Studies at Yale University
JSPS KAKENHI
Georg Walter Leitner Program in International and Comparative Political Economy at Yale University
Subject
Urban Studies,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
22 articles.
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