Local spending and the housing boom

Author

Solé Ollé, Albert

Viladecans Marsal, Elisabet

Publication date

2017-10-13T12:23:09Z

2017-10-13T12:23:09Z

2011

Abstract

We study the inter-temporal spending behavior of Spanish local governments during the last housing boom (1997-2006), a period of substantial short-run momentum in housingconstruction revenues. We argue that the unprecedented growth in these revenues might be one of the reasons underlying the increase in the sensitivity of local government spending to (predictable) revenue changes. To detect evidence of this, we study whether local spending decisions are consistent with forward-looking behavior, working within the framework provided by Holtz-Eakin et al. (1994). Our principal findings are: (i) Local spending shows substantial sensitivity to predictable changes in revenues, suggesting that Spanish local governments did not behave as fully forward-looking agents. (ii) The departure from this benchmark was much higher in those years and/or in those housing markets in which the housing boom was most intense. (iii) The sensitivity was not as great to changes in housing construction revenues as it was to changes in ordinary revenues, but this distinction became blurred as the boom intensified.

Document Type

Working document

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Administració local; Impostos; Política fiscal; Taxation; Local government; Fiscal policy

Publisher

Institut d’Economia de Barcelona

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://www.ieb.ub.edu/2012022157/ieb/ultimes-publicacions

IEB Working Paper 2011/27

[WP E-IEB11/27]

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd, (c) Solé Ollé et al., 2011

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/

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