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Supply and Demand for State and Local Services

James C. Ohls; Terence J. Wales

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1972

M ANY cross-section studies exist in the literature attempting to explain variations in per capita state and local expenditures on such services as highways, municipal services, health, and education. Differences in per capita expenditures across states are explained in terms of such factors as differences in population densities, urban-rural distributions, average income levels, age distributions, and numbers of school-age children.' In most of these studies, however, the underlying theory has not been carefully spelled out and, in particular, it is never made clear whether the demographic variables are thought to enter on the demand side or on the supply side of the market for state and local services. In the first part of this paper we look at the theory underlying such regression studies of the determinants of state and local expenditures. We attempt to distinguish between the demand side of the market for such services and the supply (cost) side. In the second part of the paper we obtain empirical estimates of price and income elasticities of demand for state and local services for three broad classifications of services. Finally we discuss a number of interesting applications of our results.

DOI
10.2307/1924569
Volume
54 (4)
Pages
424
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