EconPapers    
Economics at your fingertips  
 

Details about A. Abigail Payne

E-mail:
Workplace:Department of Economics, McMaster University, (more information at EDIRC)

Access statistics for papers by A. Abigail Payne.

Last updated 2005-10-05. Update your information in the RePEc Author Service.

Short-id: ppa10


Jump to Journal Articles

Working Papers

2007

  1. Uncharitable Treatment? Why Donations to Private and Public Foundations Deserve Equal Tax Status
    e-briefs, C.D. Howe Institute Downloads

2005

  1. Implementation of Anti-Discrimination Policy: Does Judicial Selection Matter?
    CEPR Discussion Papers, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers Downloads

2003

  1. Judicial accountability and economic policy outcomes: evidence from employment discrimination charges
    IFS Working Papers, Institute for Fiscal Studies Downloads View citations

2001

  1. Do Congressional Earmarks Increase Research Output at Universities?
    Public Economics, EconWPA Downloads View citations
  2. Government Grants to Private Charities: Do They Crowd-Out Giving or Fundraising?
    Public Economics, EconWPA Downloads View citations
    Also in Working papers, Wisconsin Madison - Social Systems (2001) Downloads View citations
  3. The Effects of Congressional Appropriation Committee Membership on the Distribution of Federal Research Funding to Universities
    Public Economics, EconWPA Downloads
    See also Journal Article in Economic Inquiry (2003)
  4. The Impact of State Governance Structures on Higher Education Resources and Research Activity
    Public Economics, EconWPA Downloads

1998

  1. An empirical study of matching grants: The "cap on CAP"
    Working Papers, University of Toronto, Department of Economics Downloads View citations
    See also Journal Article in Journal of Public Economics (1999)
  2. Estimating the Effects of Federal Research Funding on Universities using Alumni Representation on Congressional Appropriations Committees
    Working Papers, University of Toronto, Department of Economics Downloads View citations
  3. School Finance Reform, the Distribution of School Spending, and the Distribution of SAT Scores
    NBER Working Papers, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc Downloads View citations

Journal Articles

2003

  1. Do Government Grants to Private Charities Crowd Out Giving or Fund-raising?
    American Economic Review, 2003, 93, (3), 792-812 Downloads View citations
  2. Does Federal Research Funding Increase University Research Output?
    Advances in Economic Analysis & Policy, 2003, 3, (1), 1018-1018 Downloads View citations
  3. The Effects of Congressional Appropriation Committee Membership on the Distribution of Federal Research Funding to Universities
    Economic Inquiry, 2003, 41, (2), 325-345 Downloads
    See also Working Paper (2001)

2002

  1. School finance reform, the distribution of school spending, and the distribution of student test scores
    Journal of Public Economics, 2002, 83, (1), 49-82 Downloads View citations

2001

  1. Measuring the Effect of Federal Research Funding on Private Donations at Research Universities: Is Federal Research Funding More than a Substitute for Private Donations?
    International Tax and Public Finance, 2001, 8, (5), 731-751 Downloads View citations

1999

  1. An empirical study of matching grants: the 'cap on CAP'
    Journal of Public Economics, 1999, 72, (2), 269-288 Downloads View citations
    See also Working Paper (1998)
  2. Federal Sentencing Guidelines and Mandatory Minimum Sentences: Do Defendants Bargain in the Shadow of the Judge?
    Journal of Law & Economics, 1999, 42, (1), 245-69 View citations

1998

  1. Does the government crowd-out private donations? New evidence from a sample of non-profit firms
    Journal of Public Economics, 1998, 69, (3), 323-345 Downloads View citations

1997

  1. Does inter-judge disparity really matter? An analysis of the effects of sentencing reforms in three federal district courts
    International Review of Law and Economics, 1997, 17, (3), 337-366 Downloads View citations
 
 
Page updated 2009-11-06