Fueling road spending with federal stimulus
Highway spending in the United States between 2008 and 2011 was flat, despite the serious need for improvements and the big boost to state highway funds from the Recovery Act of 2009. A comparison of how much different states received and spent shows that these federal grants actually boosted highway spending substantially. However, this was offset by pressures to reduce state highway spending due to plummeting tax revenues. In fact, analysis suggests national highway spending would have fallen roughly 20% over this period without federal highway grants from the Recovery Act.
Year of publication: |
2014
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Authors: | Leduc, Sylvain ; Wilson, Daniel J. |
Published in: |
FRBSF Economic Letter. - Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. - 2014, 25
|
Publisher: |
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco |
Saved in:
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