Several theories have argued that democratic reform will lead to higher government spending. However, these theories have generally focused on expenditure on redistribution rather than expenditure on public goods. This paper presents a model predicting that democratization leads to lower government expenditure on infrastructure if the median pre-reform voter is middle class. This prediction is tested using a new panel data set of town council infrastructure spending and revenue in nineteenth-century Britain. An 1894 national reform implementing a system of "one-household-one-vote" and the secret ballot is used as the treatment event in a difference-in-difference analysis. The results show that democratic reform led to lower levels of town c...
This thesis consists of three papers studying the relationship between democratic reform, expenditur...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>To examine sub-nationa...
Abstract. The paper develops a political economic argument for the recently observed inverse u-shape...
Several theories have argued that democratic reform will lead to higher government spending. However...
Several theories have argued that democratic reform will lead to higher government spending. However...
Mid-Victorian British boroughs urgently needed to invest in local public goods, such as sanitation, ...
Does an extension of the voting franchise always increase public spending or can it be a source of r...
AbstractThe Great Reform Act of 1832 was a watershed for democracy in Great Britain. We study the vo...
We study the opportunistic political budget cycle in the London Metropolitan Boroughs between 1902 a...
We study the opportunistic political budget cycle in the London Metropolitan Boroughs between 1902 a...
During the last two centuries, taxation has not only increased dramatically in level and volume; its...
Recent research finds that political budget cycles are predominantly a phenomenon of new democracies...
AbstractWe study the opportunistic political budget cycle in the London Metropolitan Boroughs betwee...
In this paper, we argue that democracies increase government expenditure because they produce more p...
Published online: 17 March 2017During the last two centuries, taxation has not only increased dramat...
This thesis consists of three papers studying the relationship between democratic reform, expenditur...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>To examine sub-nationa...
Abstract. The paper develops a political economic argument for the recently observed inverse u-shape...
Several theories have argued that democratic reform will lead to higher government spending. However...
Several theories have argued that democratic reform will lead to higher government spending. However...
Mid-Victorian British boroughs urgently needed to invest in local public goods, such as sanitation, ...
Does an extension of the voting franchise always increase public spending or can it be a source of r...
AbstractThe Great Reform Act of 1832 was a watershed for democracy in Great Britain. We study the vo...
We study the opportunistic political budget cycle in the London Metropolitan Boroughs between 1902 a...
We study the opportunistic political budget cycle in the London Metropolitan Boroughs between 1902 a...
During the last two centuries, taxation has not only increased dramatically in level and volume; its...
Recent research finds that political budget cycles are predominantly a phenomenon of new democracies...
AbstractWe study the opportunistic political budget cycle in the London Metropolitan Boroughs betwee...
In this paper, we argue that democracies increase government expenditure because they produce more p...
Published online: 17 March 2017During the last two centuries, taxation has not only increased dramat...
This thesis consists of three papers studying the relationship between democratic reform, expenditur...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>To examine sub-nationa...
Abstract. The paper develops a political economic argument for the recently observed inverse u-shape...