Local Service Provision in Selected OECD Countries: Do Decentralized Operations Work Better?
37 Pages Posted: 24 Mar 2008
Date Written: March 2008
Abstract
There is a widespread presumption that decentralization improves public service provision. This has led to policy prescriptions that are assiduously adhered to by countries and international. This paper reviews the recent evidence from OECD countries - which is seen to be inconclusive. This suggests the need for a careful design of programs that take into account the political economy constraints and incentives, as well as more systematic and thorough evaluations of outcomes.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Endogenous Policy Decentralization: Testing the Central Tenet of Economic Federalism
-
Decentralization and the Productive Efficiency of Government: Evidence from Swiss Cantons
By Ben Lockwood and Iwan Barankay
-
Decentralization and the Productive Efficiency of Government: Evidence from Swiss Cantons
By Iwan Barankay and Ben Lockwood
-
Decentralization and Electoral Accountability: Incentives, Separation, and Voter Welfare
By Jean Hindriks and Ben Lockwood
-
Fiscal Federalism and Endogenous Lobbies' Formation
By Massimo Bordignon, Luca Colombo, ...
-
Voting, Lobbying, and the Decentralization Theorem
By Ben Lockwood
-
Centralization and Political Accountability
By Jean Hindriks and Ben Lockwood