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Fiscal Stress in Cities

This book identifies the extent, the causes and consequences of fiscal stress as it affected local government in the 1980s.

Richard Rose (Edited by), Edward C. Page (Edited by)

9780521124072, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 17 December 2009

256 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.38 kg

Conflicting pressures to increase public expenditure and restrict taxation have created fiscal stress in many major cities. In Britain, the problem is highlighted because central government is responsible for so large a portion of local government revenue, but not for its spending. The object of this book is to identify the extent, the causes and consequences of fiscal stress as it affected local government in the 1980s. To do this, the editors have brought together a multidisciplinary team of scholars working on the substantive problems facing cities, as well as experts in the urban economy and central-local government relations.

Acknowledgements
1. Can government control itself? Richard Rose and Edward Page
2. Pressures in Whitehall Maurice Wright
3. Pressures from Whitehall Royston Greenwood
4. The decline of urban economies Ken Young and Liz Mills
5. Local government as an employer Andrew Thomson
6. Do fewer pupils mean falling expenditure? S. J. Bailey
7. Local autonomy and intergovernmental finance in Britain and the United States Harold Wolman
8. Chronic instability in fiscal systems Richard Rose and Edward Page
Tables
Figures.

Subject Areas: Political economy [KCP]

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