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Theorizing About the Growth of Government: A Research Assessment
108
Citations
207
References
1981
Year
Economic DevelopmentEconomic GrowthResearch AssessmentEconomic InstitutionsSocial SciencesDemocracyGovernment SpendingGovernmental ProcessPolitical EconomyFederal Government ExpendituresFiscal PolicyPublic PolicyEconomicsPublic ExpenditureGovernment GrowthPublic EconomicsPublic SectorPolitical DevelopmentBusinessGrowth TheoryPolitical Science
ABSTRACT This paper surveys literature from several disciplines on how and why governments grow. The empirical question as to whether, or to what degree, government has grown is critically entwined with the nature of the ‘dependent variable’ chosen (federal government expenditures as a proportion of GNP, total real public expenditures, number of government employees as a percentage of the workforce, etc.). Specific approaches to the study of government growth considered include those associated with: Wagner's ‘Law’, the ‘Displacement Effect Hypothesis’, formal models of political and economic behavior, behavioral views of organizational decision making, the ineffectiveness of the public sector in coping with economic decline, and Marxist views.
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