‘Transaction costs’ are widely used to explain why rational governments often do not implement their preferred policy options. According to this idea, governments weigh the benefits of new policies against the costs associated with defending these changes to legislative opponents, political supporters, agents and voters. Flipping the transaction costs framework, this article uses ‘inaction costs’ to explain why governments sometimes, and seemingly irrationally, implement non-preferred policy options. It suggests senior governments implement non-preferred policies only when inaction costs surpass the benefits of their preferred policy coupled with avoided transaction costs. This hypothesis is tested by using content analysis to examine metro...
The apparent hegemony of the public-choice approach to metropolitan governance has been sharply chal...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explains why the Toronto city-region underwent a...
Entre 1900 et les années 20, période de la première grande expansion urbaine ce sont les municipalit...
‘Transaction costs ’ are widely used to explain why rational governments often do not implement thei...
Where there is a central government with an exclusive mandate over municipalities, along with a stat...
Municipal amalgamation is often seen as one way to ensure that municipalities are large enough to be...
The purpose of this paper is concerned with the changing role of urban governments in local economic...
In the debate over the governance of metropolitan areas, consolidationists favour single, area-wide,...
This paper examines whether political institutions affect the way municipalities are managed based o...
I study how the political decision process affects urban traffic congestion policy. First, I look at...
In 2007, the province of Ontario effectively granted Toronto “charter-city status,” handing the muni...
Robust metropolitan governance is increasingly viewed as necessary to address important economic, so...
This paper is part of the IMFG Papers on Municipal Finance and Governance series. For a full list of...
In the twentieth century, we are experiencing rapid urbanization and metropolitanization in North Am...
During the past twenty years, both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick established Royal Commissions which...
The apparent hegemony of the public-choice approach to metropolitan governance has been sharply chal...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explains why the Toronto city-region underwent a...
Entre 1900 et les années 20, période de la première grande expansion urbaine ce sont les municipalit...
‘Transaction costs ’ are widely used to explain why rational governments often do not implement thei...
Where there is a central government with an exclusive mandate over municipalities, along with a stat...
Municipal amalgamation is often seen as one way to ensure that municipalities are large enough to be...
The purpose of this paper is concerned with the changing role of urban governments in local economic...
In the debate over the governance of metropolitan areas, consolidationists favour single, area-wide,...
This paper examines whether political institutions affect the way municipalities are managed based o...
I study how the political decision process affects urban traffic congestion policy. First, I look at...
In 2007, the province of Ontario effectively granted Toronto “charter-city status,” handing the muni...
Robust metropolitan governance is increasingly viewed as necessary to address important economic, so...
This paper is part of the IMFG Papers on Municipal Finance and Governance series. For a full list of...
In the twentieth century, we are experiencing rapid urbanization and metropolitanization in North Am...
During the past twenty years, both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick established Royal Commissions which...
The apparent hegemony of the public-choice approach to metropolitan governance has been sharply chal...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explains why the Toronto city-region underwent a...
Entre 1900 et les années 20, période de la première grande expansion urbaine ce sont les municipalit...