We examine the effect of population size on government size for a panel of 130 countries for the period between 1970 and 2014. We show that previous analyses of the nexus between population size and government size are incorrectly specified and fail to consider the influence of cross-sectional dependence, non-stationarity and cointegration. Using a panel time-series approach that adequately accounts for these issues, we find that population size has a positive long-run effect on government size. This finding suggests that effects of population size that increase government size (primarily due to the costs of heterogeneity, congestion, crime and conflict) dominate effects that reduce government size (primarily due to scale economies)
The purpose of the study is to identify various political, economic and demographic factors that wil...
Given inelastic demand for labour-intensive public services, the size of government depends positive...
This note extends the work of Borcherding, Ferris and Garzoni (2003) on government size by consideri...
Using a panel data analysis, the relationship between government size and economic growth is investi...
Empirical results through a fixed effects regression model show that government size has a negative ...
This article explains the differences in size and growth of governments over time. We first divide t...
We examine the nature of the relationship between government size and economic growth and identify t...
The literature on the relationship between the size of government and economic growth is full of see...
This paper studies the empirical link between government size, institutions and economic activity u...
We construct a growth model with an explicit government role, where more government resources reduc...
We examine the nature of the relationship between government size and economic growth and identify t...
Empirical results through a fixed effects regression model show that government size has a negative ...
Is there such a thing as an optimal government size? We investigate by the non-parametric Data Envel...
We conduct a hierarchical meta-regression analysis to review 87 empirical studies that report 769 es...
We conduct a hierarchical meta-regression analysis to review 87 empirical studies that report 769 es...
The purpose of the study is to identify various political, economic and demographic factors that wil...
Given inelastic demand for labour-intensive public services, the size of government depends positive...
This note extends the work of Borcherding, Ferris and Garzoni (2003) on government size by consideri...
Using a panel data analysis, the relationship between government size and economic growth is investi...
Empirical results through a fixed effects regression model show that government size has a negative ...
This article explains the differences in size and growth of governments over time. We first divide t...
We examine the nature of the relationship between government size and economic growth and identify t...
The literature on the relationship between the size of government and economic growth is full of see...
This paper studies the empirical link between government size, institutions and economic activity u...
We construct a growth model with an explicit government role, where more government resources reduc...
We examine the nature of the relationship between government size and economic growth and identify t...
Empirical results through a fixed effects regression model show that government size has a negative ...
Is there such a thing as an optimal government size? We investigate by the non-parametric Data Envel...
We conduct a hierarchical meta-regression analysis to review 87 empirical studies that report 769 es...
We conduct a hierarchical meta-regression analysis to review 87 empirical studies that report 769 es...
The purpose of the study is to identify various political, economic and demographic factors that wil...
Given inelastic demand for labour-intensive public services, the size of government depends positive...
This note extends the work of Borcherding, Ferris and Garzoni (2003) on government size by consideri...