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Does Participatory Budgeting Change the Share of Public Funding to Low Income Neighborhoods?
85
Citations
23
References
2018
Year
Local Economic DevelopmentPolicy AnalysisSocial SciencesDistricts Increase FundingHousingEconomicsUrban PolicyPublic PolicyPublic ExpenditureUrban PlanningPublic FundingGovernment BudgetCommunity DevelopmentPublic FinancePublic EconomicsUrban EconomicsBusinessCapital FundingParticipatory BudgetingLow Income NeighborhoodsFinancing
Using a newly compiled dataset, we measure the effects of participatory budgeting on the allocation of capital funding among areas of different income levels within New York City council districts. A difference‐in‐differences design compares changes in the allocation of funding in adopting districts before and after the adoption of participatory budgeting to changes over the same period among a control group consisting of later adopters. On average, adopting districts increase funding in the next to the lowest income census tracts more than the control group, but participatory budgeting does not redirect funds to the lowest income census tracts.
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