Demand for Local Public Spending: Evidence from the British Social Attitudes Survey
Ian Preston and
Michael Ridge
Economic Journal, 1995, vol. 105, issue 430, 644-60
Abstract:
The British Social Attitudes Survey is a U.K.-wide survey that provides a rich source of information on individuals' attitudes to a variety of topics, including locally provided service. In this paper, the authors seek to model answers to questions on attitudes to local authority spending that invite the expression of a private demand for local public spending. A convincing picture has emerged of locally provided public goods as imperfectly congested public goods, with a price elastic and probably income inelastic demand. The view that central government grants may induce voter confusion over tax prices of public services also finds support. Copyright 1995 by Royal Economic Society.
Date: 1995
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