Fiscal federalism and Fiscal Autonomy: Lessons for the UK from other Industrialised Countries



provided by Research Papers in Economics

FISCAL FEDERALISM AND FISCAL AUTONOMY: LESSONS FOR

THE UK FROM OTHER INDUSTRIALISED COUNTRIES

Julia Darby, Anton Muscatelli and Graeme Roy

University of Glasgow

September 2002

We would like to thank David Heald, two anonymous referees and participants at the Scottish
Affairs and Centre for Regional Public Finance Seminar on Fiscal Autonomy, June 2002, and
at the RSABIS conference August 2002, for useful comments on an earlier draft of this paper.
Julia Darby gratefully acknowledges ESRC funding under the Devolution and Constitutional
Change Programme, award number L219252102.



More intriguing information

1. Do Decision Makers' Debt-risk Attitudes Affect the Agency Costs of Debt?
2. Qualifying Recital: Lisa Carol Hardaway, flute
3. Handling the measurement error problem by means of panel data: Moment methods applied on firm data
4. An Intertemporal Benchmark Model for Turkey’s Current Account
5. On the Real Exchange Rate Effects of Higher Electricity Prices in South Africa
6. Education and Development: The Issues and the Evidence
7. The name is absent
8. AN EXPLORATION OF THE NEED FOR AND COST OF SELECTED TRADE FACILITATION MEASURES IN ASIA AND THE PACIFIC IN THE CONTEXT OF THE WTO NEGOTIATIONS
9. Luce Irigaray and divine matter
10. Survey of Literature on Covered and Uncovered Interest Parities
11. Howard Gardner : the myth of Multiple Intelligences
12. A Review of Kuhnian and Lakatosian “Explanations” in Economics
13. The economic doctrines in the wine trade and wine production sectors: the case of Bastiat and the Port wine sector: 1850-1908
14. The name is absent
15. The name is absent
16. How Low Business Tax Rates Attract Multinational Headquarters: Municipality-Level Evidence from Germany
17. A Pure Test for the Elasticity of Yield Spreads
18. AMINO ACIDS SEQUENCE ANALYSIS ON COLLAGEN
19. On the origin of the cumulative semantic inhibition effect
20. Tastes, castes, and culture: The influence of society on preferences