The Great Recession of 2007-2009 meant a large hit to the revenues of U.S. states. Now, more than five years later, revenues in most of these states have recovered. But what has fuelled this recovery? Using data from across all 50 states, James Alm and David L. Sjoquist find that internal factors – such as the state’s economy, taxes, demographics, politics and policy – have had little or no effect on its revenue recovery. They argue that their results show that trends in state government revenues are largely influenced by broader, national, economic trends beyond the control of state governments
Article: How the recession affects state and local tax shortfalls - and how those shortfalls affect ...
Jeff Barnett, Local Government Finance and Statistics Branch, U.S. Census Bureau. Tracy Gordon, Fell...
In the decade following the Great Recession, students across the U.S. lost nearly $600 billion from ...
We analyze the behavior of state revenues since the early 1950s to determine the severity of the rev...
The recovery from the Great Recession has been slow compared to previous recoveries. However, at the...
Professional paper for the fulfillment of the Master of Public Policy program.In late 2007, the U.S....
The U.S. economy entered the Great Recession in December 2007 and exited in June 2009. This national...
The Great Recession had the most severe impact on state tax revenues of any downturn since the Great...
This paper examines state-level differences in the effects of the Great Recession. It finds that sev...
I propose a novel method to estimate the effect of recessions on government finances. Using the Grea...
The Great Recession of 2008–09 was by far the most severe United States economic downturn since the ...
From 2007-2009 the United States suffered from the largest economic downturn since the Great Depress...
The U.S. economy officially fell into recession in December 2007, but the timing of the downturn var...
The 2007-10 recession has imposed significant fiscal hardships on state and local governments. The r...
Private-sector Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth ratios and employment recovery rates following th...
Article: How the recession affects state and local tax shortfalls - and how those shortfalls affect ...
Jeff Barnett, Local Government Finance and Statistics Branch, U.S. Census Bureau. Tracy Gordon, Fell...
In the decade following the Great Recession, students across the U.S. lost nearly $600 billion from ...
We analyze the behavior of state revenues since the early 1950s to determine the severity of the rev...
The recovery from the Great Recession has been slow compared to previous recoveries. However, at the...
Professional paper for the fulfillment of the Master of Public Policy program.In late 2007, the U.S....
The U.S. economy entered the Great Recession in December 2007 and exited in June 2009. This national...
The Great Recession had the most severe impact on state tax revenues of any downturn since the Great...
This paper examines state-level differences in the effects of the Great Recession. It finds that sev...
I propose a novel method to estimate the effect of recessions on government finances. Using the Grea...
The Great Recession of 2008–09 was by far the most severe United States economic downturn since the ...
From 2007-2009 the United States suffered from the largest economic downturn since the Great Depress...
The U.S. economy officially fell into recession in December 2007, but the timing of the downturn var...
The 2007-10 recession has imposed significant fiscal hardships on state and local governments. The r...
Private-sector Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth ratios and employment recovery rates following th...
Article: How the recession affects state and local tax shortfalls - and how those shortfalls affect ...
Jeff Barnett, Local Government Finance and Statistics Branch, U.S. Census Bureau. Tracy Gordon, Fell...
In the decade following the Great Recession, students across the U.S. lost nearly $600 billion from ...