Expenditures and receipts: Testing for causality in state and local government finances
Michael Marlow and
Neela Manage
Public Choice, 1987, vol. 53, issue 3, 243-255
Abstract:
The results of our tests indicate similarities between the expenditure-tax receipt relations of state governments to those previously reported for the Federal government in Manage and Marlow (1986); the results reported here indicate support for the hypothesis that tax receipts cause expenditures at the state level of government. For tests utilizing symmetric lag structures ranging from three to five years, state expenditures appear to follow state tax receipts. For the shortest lag length (2,2), the determination of bidirectional causality does not make us reject the hypothesis that higher spending levels result from higher revenue levels; rather, the causality appears to be in both directions for the shortest lag length. The finding that tax revenues and expenditures are not causally related at the local level for the three longest lag structures is unexpected. However, the result may be a product of an aggregation problem. The fact that all local governments are aggregated on a state-by-state basis may generate observations that are not useful for our empirical work. For example, if the funding constraints of local governments on a state-by-state basis are especially diverse, their aggregation to the state level of observation may produce data that is not economically meaningful. Nonetheless, the one case where significant causality is observed lends some empirical support for the hypothesis that tax receipts determine spending. Two policy implications are mentioned. One, policy proposals at all levels of governments aimed at solving the occurrence of unacceptably large deficits should consider the linkage between expenditures and tax receipts before they recommend discretionary changes in either or both of the components of deficits: expenditures and tax receipts. For example, the results of our tests do not rule out the notion that a tax increase could promote expenditures that ultimately counter the deficit-reducing effect of a given tax hike. Two, the fact that our results at the state level lend support for the view that causality runs one-way from expenditures to tax receipts suggests that the many dissimilarities in legislative and constitutional constraints between the Federal and state levels of government may not matter much in terms of the causal relation between expenditures and tax revenues. A possible reason for similarities in behavior may stem from the circumvention of legislative or constitutional intent at the state level of government which ultimately serve to weaken differences between the effective constraints facing Federal and state governments. Moreover, it would be puzzling if we found widely disparate behaviors between government units in the absence of significantly different constraints. Copyright Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 1987
Date: 1987
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DOI: 10.1007/BF00127349
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