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Decentralized Taxation and the Size of Government: Evidence from Swiss State and Local Governments (2003)

Abstract
According to the Leviathan-Model, fiscal federalism is seen as a binding constraint on a revenue-maximizing government. The competitive pressure of fiscal federalism is supposed to reduce public sector size as compared to unitary states. However, empirical results concerning the Leviathan hypothesis are mixed. This study uses a state and local-level panel data set of Swiss cantons from 1980 to 1998 to empirically analyze the effect of different federalist institutions on the size and structure of government revenue. Because of the considerable tax autonomy of sub-national Swiss governments, it is possible to investigate different mechanisms by which fiscal federalism may influence government size. The results indicate that tax exporting has a revenue expanding effect whereas tax competition favors a smaller size of government. Fragmentation has essentially no effect on the size of government revenue for Swiss cantons. The overall effect of revenue decentralization leads to fewer tax revenue but higher user charges. Thus, revenue decentralization favors a smaller size of government revenue and shifts government revenue from taxes to user charges.

Publication details
Download http://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/EXPORT/DL/31419.pdf
Repository University of St.Gallen - Alexandria Repository (Switzerland)
Keywords federalism, government revenue, tax competition, tax exporting
Type Text
Language Englisch

Cited publications (10)
Föderalismus und Staatsquote (2004)
The Political Economy of Tax Structure: Some Panel Evidence for Swiss Cantons (2000)
Peter Birch Sørensen, International Tax Coordination: Regionalism versus Globalism (2000)
Fiscal Decentralization and Government Size in Latin America (2000)
Strategic Tax Competition in Switzerland: Evidence from a Panel of the Swiss Cantons
Fiscal Effects of the Voter Initiative: Evidence from the Last 30 Years.
Leviathans, Federal Transfers, and the Cartelization Hypothesis
HIRSCHMAN (Albert Otto) - Exit, voice and loyalty, Responses to decline in firms, organisations and States.
Fragmented government effects on fiscal policy: new evidence (2000)
The Effects of Fiscal Institutions on Public Finance: A Survey of the Empirical Evidence (2001)