Flypaper Effect and Sluggishness: Evidence from Regional Health Expenditure in Italy.
In Italy, public expenditure reduction is achieved through a revision of social security and health care programs. In particular, public health expenditure control has been implemented through a reform that imposes more stringent budget rules to local governments and a considerable reduction in grants-in-aid from the central government. This paper investigates empirically whether the response to this decrease in categorical lump-sum grants from the central to local governments results in an asymmetric response to intergovernmental grants. Hard budget and soft budget constraint hypotheses are estimated by using a sample of cross-sectional and time observations covering the 20 Italian regions over the period 1989-1993. The main finding is the existence of a standard and a super flypaper effect in both models. The introduction of the soft-budget constraint hypothesis results in a stronger effect of grants and a lower response of own resources which shows that local governments prefer to incur some deficit instead of reducing health care expenditure. Copyright 2003 by Kluwer Academic Publishers
Year of publication: |
2003
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Authors: | Levaggi, Rosella ; Zanola, Roberto |
Published in: |
International Tax and Public Finance. - Springer, ISSN 0927-5940. - Vol. 10.2003, 5, p. 535-47
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Publisher: |
Springer |
Saved in:
freely available
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