2011
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1865728
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In Government We Trust: The Role of Fiscal Decentralization

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Cited by 112 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…A growing number of household surveys typically have shown increased citizen satisfaction with decentralized delivery of public services (e.g., Hellman et al ., for Indonesia; Diaz‐Serrano and Rodríguez‐Pose, for European countries). Similarly, other studies find that decentralization is associated with improved citizens’ feelings of trust in government‐related institutions (Ligthart and van Oudheusden, for OECD countries). Finally, some recent contributions have focused on the implications of decentralization for happiness.…”
Section: Economic and Fiscal Consequences Of Fiscal Decentralizationmentioning
confidence: 57%
“…A growing number of household surveys typically have shown increased citizen satisfaction with decentralized delivery of public services (e.g., Hellman et al ., for Indonesia; Diaz‐Serrano and Rodríguez‐Pose, for European countries). Similarly, other studies find that decentralization is associated with improved citizens’ feelings of trust in government‐related institutions (Ligthart and van Oudheusden, for OECD countries). Finally, some recent contributions have focused on the implications of decentralization for happiness.…”
Section: Economic and Fiscal Consequences Of Fiscal Decentralizationmentioning
confidence: 57%
“…Alderman (2002) suggests that welfare transfers in Albania are better targeted because they are decided by local officials. Ligthart and Van Oudheusden (2011) show that fiscal decentralization increases the level of trust the citizens have in government. Finally, Borge et al (2004) show, using a decentralization reform in Norway, that when spending discretion is decentralized it suits better local demand.…”
Section: Allocationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In public policy literature, government effectiveness is predominantly incorporated to the analysis (see e.g. Afonso et al, 2010;Butkiewicz and Yanikkaya, 2011;Ligthart and van Oudheusden, 2015). We employ government effectiveness to proxy institutional quality in our models, but in Table 5 Taken together, the results show that higher ratings allow a favourable environment for borrowing.…”
Section: 2 M a I N F I N D I N G Smentioning
confidence: 99%