Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Fiscal Decentralization: Benefits and Problems
- 2 Locational Efficiency and Efficiency-Supporting Tax Systems
- 3 Perfect Interregional Competition
- 4 Interregional Tax Competition for Mobile Capital
- 5 Optimal Structure of Local Governments
- 6 Incentive Equivalence through Perfect Household Mobility
- 7 Efficiency and the Degree of Household Mobility
- 8 Decentralized Redistribution Policy
- 9 Decentralization and Intergenerational Problems
- 10 Informational Asymmetry between the Regions and the Center
- 11 Conclusions
- References
- Index
8 - Decentralized Redistribution Policy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Fiscal Decentralization: Benefits and Problems
- 2 Locational Efficiency and Efficiency-Supporting Tax Systems
- 3 Perfect Interregional Competition
- 4 Interregional Tax Competition for Mobile Capital
- 5 Optimal Structure of Local Governments
- 6 Incentive Equivalence through Perfect Household Mobility
- 7 Efficiency and the Degree of Household Mobility
- 8 Decentralized Redistribution Policy
- 9 Decentralization and Intergenerational Problems
- 10 Informational Asymmetry between the Regions and the Center
- 11 Conclusions
- References
- Index
Summary
In addition to its allocative function, the government must redistribute income between poor and rich households in order to ensure a fair income distribution. Here, the question once again arises of how to delegate this function to different governmental levels. The prevailing view is that redistribution policy is best administered by the central government (see Stigler 1957; Musgrave 1971; Oates 1972; Brown and Oates 1987). According to this opinion, decentralized redistribution policy causes some kind of adverse selection. It is argued that regional redistribution programs (a) attract poor households from neighboring regions by increasing their net income via transfers and (b) repel rich households, who have to pay for the program. From the viewpoint of a single region, the marginal costs of providing additional transfer payments to poor residents exceed the social marginal costs, since other regions benefit from the induced migration responses by losing beneficiaries of and gaining contributors to their welfare system. However, this is not taken into account by the region that enacts the program. As the analysis of Chapter 3 reveals, perfect interregional competition for mobile households results in a policy optimum where regional governments have no incentive to redistribute income among the owners of mobile and immobile factors of production. This adverse selection problem arises to a far less pronounced extent when the redistribution function is assigned to the central government, since the degree of household mobility decreases with the size of the jurisdiction.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Theory of Public Finance in a Federal State , pp. 137 - 151Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000