Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Growth of govt
- differentiate between growth in govt
expenditure vs. growth in govt's share
in overall economy
- Increased govt expenditure since 1950's; growth stabilised since 1990's
- Macro theories
- Wagner
- stages-of-development approach
- govt grows as economy moves from traditional to industrial
- first stages
- capital investment in esp. infrastructure
- put legal & administrative institutions
in place to decrease transaction costs
- e.g. property rights
- middle stages
- capital investment still high
- correct market failure that arises
from increased econ activity
- last stage
- capital expenditure by govt as proportion of GDP decreases
- Increased expenditure on education,
healthcare, welfare security, social services
- from here, govt share in economy decreases continuously
- Peacock & Wiseman
- displacement effect
- size of govt largely determined by
political events, e.g. wars, elections
- political events that require large
expenditure increase the size of govt
- creation of interest groups/ getting used to
high expenditure and tax means govt doesn't
shrink to original size after the political event
- Meltzer-Richard hypothesis
- general equilibrium model: govt size
as function of majority voting
- NB of median voter in determining size of govt
- "decisive voter"
- extention of franchise most NB
determinant of share of govt in
economy
- pressure on govt comes from
where income of median voter
lies in relation to average income
- if below = pressure on
govt to redistribute
income
- only works if you assume voters are aware of disincentive effects of high
taxes and redistribution, i.e. median voter will choose tax rate that maximises
her utility SUBJECT TO the impact the rate will have on the behaviour of other
econ actors
- Micro theories
- Baumol
- unbalanced productivity growth
- progressive vs non-progressive sectors
- progressive large technology absorption capacity
- increase in labour productivity as new technology is adopted
- non-progressive reliant
on labour, e.g. medicine
- ceiling on labour productivity
increases due to new technology
- public sector wages must remain
competitive with private sector
- increased wages in public sector due
to increased labour productivity in
private sector
- Brown & Jackson
- service enviro explanation
- explain demand and supply
for public goods and services
- demand a function of
- income of median voter
- preferences of
median voter
- tax on median voter
- supply a function of
- costs of production
- Role of politicians,
bureaucrats & other
interest groups
- govt size determined by
- vote-maximising politicians
- budget-maximising
bureaucrats
- increase influence & power
- lobbying of specific
interest groups
- e.g. farmers & subsidies