The causes of government expenditure growth: A survey of the U.S. evidence |
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Authors: | Thomas E. Borcherding |
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Affiliation: | Claremont Graduate School, Claremont, CA 91711, USA |
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Abstract: | The growth of government budgets can be broken down into a-institutional and institutional components. The former component — the familiar substitution, income, and population/public goods-tax sharing effects — is estimated to contribute about two-fifths of the growth of U.S. government spending. The latter component — rent-seeking political redistributions, bureaucracy and perceptual/informational impedimentia — is important, too, but an exact imputation cannot be asserted given the state of the art in empirical public choice theory. The cross-effects on spending of the growth of regulation and tax preferences or tax expenditures, though interesting, is not pursued. |
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