Legend of the Pork Barrel? The Causal Effect of Legislature Size on Public Spending
    Holzmann C, Zaddach J  (2019)
    
    
    Publication Language: English
    Publication Type: Journal article, Original article
    Publication year: 2019
Journal
    
    
    
    
    Book Volume: 75
    
    Pages Range: 39-58
    
    
    
    
    Journal Issue: 1
    
    URI: https://viewer.content-select.com/pdf/viewer?id=5117&id_type=doi&identifiers=10.1628/fa-2018-0024&signature=3040d0f43e6dccb8812de0508495ce740be3e9e0&frontend=1〈uage=deu&session=l6Jb4WUbYy1pERstR07wMvzzbFjuz2ZXdnfb7KLebVpWJXNPLxzbDMQmM50T2DSa
    DOI: 10.1628/fa-2018-0024
    
    Abstract
    
                
                
                    This paper investigates pork-barrel spending, the 
inefficient effect of legislature size on public spending, in at-large 
electoral systems. Using a rich panel-data set on German municipalities 
whose councils are elected at large, we employ a regression 
discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of legislature size 
of public spending. The empirical results indicate that the pork-barrel 
effect in at-large electoral systems is of very small economic 
magnitude. This finding is in line with the theoretical prediction of a 
zero effect, but is in sharp contrast to previously published estimates 
in the literature that commonly support a positive pork-barrel spending 
effect.
                
                
             
    
    
    
        
            Authors with CRIS profile
        
        
    
    
    
    
    How to cite
    
        APA:
        Holzmann, C., & Zaddach, J. (2019). Legend of the Pork Barrel? The Causal Effect of Legislature Size on Public Spending. Finanzarchiv, 75(1), 39-58. https://doi.org/10.1628/fa-2018-0024
    
    
        MLA:
        Holzmann, Carolin, and Jonathan Zaddach. "Legend of the Pork Barrel? The Causal Effect of Legislature Size on Public Spending." Finanzarchiv 75.1 (2019): 39-58.
    
    BibTeX: Download