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Nguyen-Hoang, Phuong; Zhang, Pengju – Education Finance and Policy, 2022
This is the first study to examine the fiscal effects of the New York property tax levy limit, using variation from the degree of fiscal stringency across school districts and over time in its first five years of implementation. Based on a difference-in-differences estimator, coupled with an event study specification, we find that the tax limit…
Descriptors: School Districts, Economic Impact, Educational Finance, Expenditure per Student
Saastamoinen, Antti; Kortelainen, Mika – Education Finance and Policy, 2020
We study the effects of intergovernmental grants on school spending within the Finnish system of high school education funding. Using a kinked grant rule, the system allocates lump-sum intergovernmental grants to local high school education providers. Utilizing the quasi-experimental variation in grants given by the rule, we identify the effects…
Descriptors: Grants, Educational Finance, High Schools, Foreign Countries
Evans, William N.; Schwab, Robert M.; Wagner, Kathryn L. – Education Finance and Policy, 2019
We examine the impact of the Great Recession on public education finance and employment. Five major themes emerge from our work. First, nearly 300,000 school employees lost their jobs. Second, schools that were heavily dependent financially on state governments were particularly vulnerable to the recession. Third, local revenues from the property…
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Public Education, Educational Finance, Employment
Nguyen-Hoang, Phuong – Education Finance and Policy, 2014
This is the first study to directly examine the relationship between tax increment financing (TIF) and education expenditures, using the state of Iowa as a case study. I find that greater use of TIF is associated with reduced education expenditures. I also find little evidence to support the commonly held proposition that school spending increases…
Descriptors: Taxes, Educational Finance, Income, School Districts
Eom, Tae Ho; Duncombe, William; Nguyen-Hoang, Phuong; Yinger, John – Education Finance and Policy, 2014
New York's School Tax Relief Program, STAR, provides state-funded property tax relief for homeowners. Like a matching grant, STAR changes the price of education, thereby altering the incentives of voters and school officials and leading to unintended consequences. Using data for New York State school districts before and after STAR was…
Descriptors: Taxes, State Aid, Housing, Ownership
Chakrabarti, Rajashri; Livingston, Max; Roy, Joydeep – Education Finance and Policy, 2014
The Great Recession led to marked declines in state revenue. In this paper we investigate whether (and how) local school districts modified their funding and taxing decisions in response to state aid declines in the post-recession period. Our results reveal school districts responded to state aid cuts in the post-recession period by countering…
Descriptors: State Aid, Educational Finance, School Districts, Financial Support
Downes, Tom; Killeen, Kieran M. – Education Finance and Policy, 2014
We examine changes in the use of nontax revenues for education finance from 1991 to 2010. Beyond the summary of usage over time, we ask whether nontraditional revenues like fees accentuate or mitigate the impact of downturns. More generally, we examine the extent to which school districts have responded to fiscal pressures by turning to nontax…
Descriptors: Public Education, Educational Finance, Taxes, Educational Equity (Finance)
Conlin, Michael; Thompson, Paul N. – Education Finance and Policy, 2014
We consider issues of equality and efficiency in two different school funding systems--a state-level system in Michigan and a foundation system in Ohio. Unlike Ohio, the Michigan system restricts districts from generating property or income tax revenue to fund operating expenditures. In both states, districts fund capital expenditures with local…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance), Financial Support, State Aid
McMillen, Daniel P.; Singell, Larry D., Jr. – Education Finance and Policy, 2010
Prior work uses a parametric approach to study the distributional effects of school finance reform and finds evidence that reform yields greater equality of school expenditures by lowering spending in high-spending districts (leveling down) or increasing spending in low-spending districts (leveling up). We develop a kernel density…
Descriptors: Expenditures, Finance Reform, Educational Finance, Taxes
Fletcher, Deborah; Kenny, Lawrence W. – Education Finance and Policy, 2008
How do the elderly influence school spending if they are a minority of the population? We estimate the determinants of school spending in a median voter model, comparing four assumptions about how the elderly influence the identity of the median voter. Using a county-level panel, we find that elderly preferences are best characterized by assuming…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Educational Finance, Voting, Migrants
Johnson, William R. – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
This article estimates the dollar amount of public higher education subsidies received by U.S. youth and examines the distribution of subsidies and the taxes that finance them across parental and student income levels. Although youths from high-income families obtain more benefit from higher education subsidies, high-income households pay…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Family Income, Taxes, Financial Support
Schmidt, Stephen J.; Scott, Karen – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
In 1997, Vermont passed Act 60, which reformed its education finance system to achieve greater equality of spending. The reform encouraged wealthy towns to reduce spending; it was politically unpopular and was replaced, in 2004, by Act 68. We analyze the spending incentives created by the two acts and estimate the effects the change will have on…
Descriptors: Incentives, Taxes, State Legislation, Educational Finance