This paper studies the impact on public education spending of social democratic participation in government. By means of a pooled time-series analysis of spending in OECD democracies, it is shown that social democrats have increased public spending primarily on higher education. This finding is at odds with simple class-based models of partisan preferences (Boix) that predict a preference for non-tertiary education. As an alternative, the notion of a 'new politics of public investment in education' (Iversen) is presented. From this perspective, political parties are not merely transmission belts for the economic interests of social classes, but use policies and spending strategically to attract and consolidate voter groups. By increasing pu...
Recent years have seen a number of studies on the determinants of educa-tional spending. Almost all ...
In most democracies, the majority of education expenditures is financed by the government. In non-de...
<p>When do political parties push for public investments in education, research, and infrastructure?...
This paper studies the impact on public education spending of social democratic participation in gov...
This paper builds on the arguments developed by Carles Boix (1997, 1998) about partisan differences ...
This paper builds on the arguments developed by Carles Boix (1997, 1998) about partisan differences ...
This article describes the relationship between education and social policy across the Organization ...
Much literature has analysed parties’ influence on public education spending. We challenge this lite...
Much literature has analysed parties’ influence on public education spending. We challenge this lite...
The literature on the partisan foundations of education policies leads to ambiguous expectations wit...
Many studies analysing partisan politics assume differing preferences based on parties’ ideological ...
Over the last 30 years, countries with more unequal income distributions tended to spend more on ter...
Scholarly interest in the study of education from the perspective of political science has increased...
Regression results show that more unequal societies tend to spend comparatively more on higher level...
In this paper, we address two empirical puzzles: Why are cross-country differences in the division o...
Recent years have seen a number of studies on the determinants of educa-tional spending. Almost all ...
In most democracies, the majority of education expenditures is financed by the government. In non-de...
<p>When do political parties push for public investments in education, research, and infrastructure?...
This paper studies the impact on public education spending of social democratic participation in gov...
This paper builds on the arguments developed by Carles Boix (1997, 1998) about partisan differences ...
This paper builds on the arguments developed by Carles Boix (1997, 1998) about partisan differences ...
This article describes the relationship between education and social policy across the Organization ...
Much literature has analysed parties’ influence on public education spending. We challenge this lite...
Much literature has analysed parties’ influence on public education spending. We challenge this lite...
The literature on the partisan foundations of education policies leads to ambiguous expectations wit...
Many studies analysing partisan politics assume differing preferences based on parties’ ideological ...
Over the last 30 years, countries with more unequal income distributions tended to spend more on ter...
Scholarly interest in the study of education from the perspective of political science has increased...
Regression results show that more unequal societies tend to spend comparatively more on higher level...
In this paper, we address two empirical puzzles: Why are cross-country differences in the division o...
Recent years have seen a number of studies on the determinants of educa-tional spending. Almost all ...
In most democracies, the majority of education expenditures is financed by the government. In non-de...
<p>When do political parties push for public investments in education, research, and infrastructure?...