This study presents intertemporal budgeting as of 1999 for all 50 U.S.states. Intertemporal state budgeting compares the present value of a state's projected receipts with the present value of its projected expenditures (exclusive of interest payments)plus the current value of its net debt (liabilities minus assets). Our projections start with the 1999 U.S.Census Bureau's State Government Finances survey of receipts,expenditures,and debt.We group these highly detailed data into a framework that is consistent with the National Income and Product Account accounts. The 1999 Census data are the latest available.To project total receipts and expenditures for years beyond 1999,we first form average 1999 receipts and expenditures by age and sex us...
Professional paper for the fulfillment of the Master of Public Policy program.In late 2007, the U.S....
The Great Recession of 2008-2010 is showing that the states and national government have spent too m...
Year-to-date revenues for the first four months of FY2003 were above their FY2002 level in most New ...
In order to assess contemporaneous trends in U.S. state budget practices, we apply OLS regression me...
We analyze the behavior of state revenues since the early 1950s to determine the severity of the rev...
Do governments satisfy an intertemporal budget constraint? This paper uses a panel of U.S. state dat...
Ernest R. Moser is assistant professor of Economics at Northeast Louisiana University
The current fiscal crises that most states in the United States are facing are generally the result ...
Balanced budget requirements lead to substantial pro-cyclicality in state government spending outsid...
state, fiscal policy, transitory income, fluctuations, expediture, tax collection
"About the authors : Steven Winter and Seth Kessler are graduate research assistants and master's ca...
Efforts to maintain balanced budgets lead to substantial pro-cyclicality in states' capital investme...
Across the nation, large budget gaps are forcing state governments to make tough policy choices. Whi...
Budget - Connecticut ; Budget - Massachusetts ; Budget - Maine ; Budget - New Hampshire ; Budget - V...
I propose a novel method to estimate the effect of recessions on government finances. Using the Grea...
Professional paper for the fulfillment of the Master of Public Policy program.In late 2007, the U.S....
The Great Recession of 2008-2010 is showing that the states and national government have spent too m...
Year-to-date revenues for the first four months of FY2003 were above their FY2002 level in most New ...
In order to assess contemporaneous trends in U.S. state budget practices, we apply OLS regression me...
We analyze the behavior of state revenues since the early 1950s to determine the severity of the rev...
Do governments satisfy an intertemporal budget constraint? This paper uses a panel of U.S. state dat...
Ernest R. Moser is assistant professor of Economics at Northeast Louisiana University
The current fiscal crises that most states in the United States are facing are generally the result ...
Balanced budget requirements lead to substantial pro-cyclicality in state government spending outsid...
state, fiscal policy, transitory income, fluctuations, expediture, tax collection
"About the authors : Steven Winter and Seth Kessler are graduate research assistants and master's ca...
Efforts to maintain balanced budgets lead to substantial pro-cyclicality in states' capital investme...
Across the nation, large budget gaps are forcing state governments to make tough policy choices. Whi...
Budget - Connecticut ; Budget - Massachusetts ; Budget - Maine ; Budget - New Hampshire ; Budget - V...
I propose a novel method to estimate the effect of recessions on government finances. Using the Grea...
Professional paper for the fulfillment of the Master of Public Policy program.In late 2007, the U.S....
The Great Recession of 2008-2010 is showing that the states and national government have spent too m...
Year-to-date revenues for the first four months of FY2003 were above their FY2002 level in most New ...