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Metropolitan City Expenditures by Roy W. Bahl

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Metropolitan City Expenditures

A Comparative Analysis

Roy W. Bahl

University Press of Kentucky · Print & ebook · July 15, 2014

Reading lane: Government Accounting

In this study of the structure of core city expenditures, Mr.

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Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy Government AccountingGood for readers interested in urbanGood for readers who enjoy Government Accounting and Comparative Economics.

Book Details

Authors
Roy W. Bahl
Publisher
University Press of Kentucky
Published
July 15, 2014
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Government Accounting · Comparative Economics
Reading lane
Government Accounting

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Publisher Categories

  • Finance

  • Comparative Economics

About This Book

In this study of the structure of core city expenditures, Mr. Bahl analyzes the functional relationship between per capita expenditures and selected economic, demographic, and sociological factors. He finds that the problems central to intercity variations in per capita spending are directly related to the coordination of fiscal and physical planning and that economic and social areas, not corporate boundaries, represent the most appropriate planning units. Mr. Bahl extends...

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In this study of the structure of core city expenditures, Mr. Bahl analyzes the functional relationship between per capita expenditures and selected economic, demographic, and sociological factors. He finds that the problems central to intercity variations in per capita spending are directly related to the coordination of fiscal and physical planning and that economic and social areas, not corporate boundaries, represent the most appropriate planning units. Mr. Bahl extends the static analysis of the pioneering work of Harvey Brazer to a comparative static and temporal context, comparing through regression techniques the factors underlying per capita variations in 198 Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area cities, from 1950 to 1960. His results suggest that the different levels may be primarily attributed to interactions between the central city and the urban fringe and to disparities in the dependence on inter-government revenues.

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