Abstract: Economic theory predicts that unconditional intergovernmental grant income
and private income are perfectly fungible. Despite this prediction,
the literature on fiscal federalism documents that grant and private
income are empirically non-equivalent. A large scale school finance reform
in New Hampshire--the typical school district experienced a 200 percent
increase in grant income--provides an unusually compelling test of the
equivalence prediction. Most theoretical explanations for non-equivalence
focus on mechanisms which produce public good provision levels which differ
from the decisive voter's preferences. New Hampshire determines local public
goods provision via a form of direct democracy--a setting which rules out
these explanations. In contrast to the general support in the literature for
non-equivalence, the empirical estimates in this paper suggest that approximately
92 cents per grant dollar are spent on tax reduction. These results not only document
that equivalence holds in a setting with a strong presumption that public good
provision decisions reflect the preferences of voters, but also directly confirm
the prediction of the seminal work of Bradford and Oates (1971) that lump-sum grant
income is equivalent to a tax reduction. In addition, the paper presents theoretical
arguments that grant income capitalization and heterogeneity in the marginal propensity
to spend on public goods may generate spurious rejections of the equivalence prediction.
The heterogeneity argument is confirmed empirically. Specifically, the results indicate
that lower income communities spend more of the grant income on education than wealthier
communities, a finding interpreted as revealing that the Engel curve for education is concave.
Keywords: Intergovernmental grants, fiscal federalism, flypaper
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