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On the Applicability of the Tiebout Model to Japanese Cities
Review of Urban & Regional Development Studies, 1999The purpose of this paper is to apply the so‐called Tiebout hypothesis empirically to Japanese cities. 117 cities in the Tokyo metropolitan area and 72 cities in the Osaka metropolitan area are respectively classified into eight clusters using public expenditure densities as attribute variables.
Noboru Sakashita, Motohiko Hirao
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Further Tests of Individual-Level Propositions from the Tiebout Model
The Journal of Politics, 1992Urban researchers have begun to reexamine Charles Tiebout's ideas about citizen-consumer locational choice in metropolitan areas. David Lowery and William Lyons, among others, have empirically investigated assumptions which underpin Tiebout's thesis using individual-level rather than aggregate data. The purpose of this research note is to contribute to
Stephen L. Percy, Brett W. Hawkins
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Taxes, Spending, and Property Values: Supply Adjustment in a Tiebout-Oates Model
Journal of Political Economy, 1974This paper extends the capitalization approach of Wallace E. Oates to consider supply adjustment in a local public goods market of the sort hypothesized by Charles M. Tiebout. It is shown that Oates's singleperiod cross-section analysis-demonstrated demand conditions approximated Tiebout's hypotheses in a situation in which supply was not in long-run ...
Edel, Matthew, Sclar, Elliott
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A Unified Analysis of Tiebout Models and Tax Competition Models
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018I construct a fiscal competition model in which immobile residents compete for mobile workers. This framework nests two influential theories, Tiebout (1956) and tax competition (Zodrow and Mieszkowski, 1986), which yield contrasting predictions on the efficiency of public goods provision in a federation.
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Tiebout and redistribution in a model of residential and political choice
Journal of Public Economics, 2005Abstract The paper considers a two-community model with freely mobile individuals. Individuals differ not only in their incomes, but also in their tastes for a local public good. In each jurisdiction, the amount of public services is determined by majority vote of the inhabitants, and local spending is financed by a residence-based linear income tax.
Anke S. Kessler, Christoph Lülfesmann
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Dynamic Analysis of the Tiebout Model with Numerical Simulations
The Japanese Economic Review, 1999In this paper a dynamic formulation of C. M. Tiebout's theory is attempted, with the properties of this dynamic model examined analytically as well as numerically. Three conclusions are reached. (1) An association between income endowment and intensity of preference for public goods among heterogeneous groups of individuals produces a subtle difference
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The Impact of Jurisdictional Boundaries: An Individual-Level Test of the Tiebout Model
The Journal of Politics, 1989Despite the considerable research attention accorded the Tiebout model, its empirical foundations are not especially well developed. That is, existing empirical investigations of the Tiebout model only indirectly address many of its central assumptions, given their nearly exclusive focus on aggregate-level analyses when the model evaluates ...
David Lowery, William E. Lyons
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Choice and Efficiency in Education: New Perspective on the Tiebout Model
2018The aspiration to achieve universal access to quality education for all is often accompanied by the challenge of efficiency. Commonly, public good provision (e.g., education) is perceived as less efficient than private markets (Samuelson PA, Rev Econ Stat 36:387–389, 1954).
Mor Zahavi +2 more
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Quantities, qualities and multiple public services in the Tiebout model
Journal of Public Economics, 1984Abstract This paper introduces a new, more realistic characterization of local public services. This characterization fits education, parks, and streets, none of which are a pure Samuelsonian good. It is shown that Tiebout's hypothesis holds for this new type of services, provided correct user charges are adopted.
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A Pure Theory of Metropolitan Redistribution Patterns: Modifications Upon Tiebout's Model
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2012Tiebout’s (1956) theory about redistribution of population and the bundle of public goods, ever since, has been a major reference for many of recent endeavors to explain spatial redistribution patterns in metropolitan areas. In this paper, based on Tiebout’s rationale and by proposing major modifications on how his hypothesis would work better, I ...
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