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Chapter 14 Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Intergovernmental Grants Grants in Theory and Practice in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 Purposes of Grants 3 The Choice of Tools 4 Types of Grants 5 Efficiency and Equity Effects of Grants 6 Matching Grants

Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

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Page 1: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

Chapter 14Chapter 14Intergovernmental Grants Intergovernmental Grants

in Theory and Practice in Theory and Practice Chapter outline

1. The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants

2. Purposes of Grants

3. The Choice of Tools

4. Types of Grants

5. Efficiency and Equity Effects of Grants

6.Matching Grants

Page 2: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

Usually that sharing involves a transfer of funds from one level of government to another that is primarily responsible for providing the service. Such transfers are called intergovernmental grants.

Grants are a significant expenditure for the federal government and a very important source of revenue for state and local governments.

Page 3: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

1.The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants1.The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants

Federal grants are an important source of revenue to state and local governments, although less important now than in earlier periods.

State aid to local governments, especially for education, continues to be a major local revenue source in most states.

Federal aid has a history of almost two centuries, with major growth occurring in the 1930s and the 1960s followed by some retrenchment in the 1980s and 1990s.

Page 4: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

22.. Purposes of GrantsPurposes of Grants

Among the purposes of intergovernmental grants are vertical and horizontal equalization, correcting spatial externalities, redirecting priorities, and experimenting with new ideas and approaches.

①Equalizing Grants One important function of grants is to balance reve

nue with service responsibilities both by levels of government and across governments at the same level.

Page 5: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

Vertical equalization attempts to correct the difference between the amount of revenue that a government can raise and the amount of responsibility that appropriately falls to that level in a multilevel or federal system.

The imbalance between revenue needs and the ability to raise revenue has a horizontal dimension as well.

Page 6: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

②Correcting Spatial ExternalitiesThe existence of spatial externalities can

lead to spending less than the optimal amount by a state or local government if a significant part of the benefits spill over to an adjacent jurisdiction.

Grants from a high level of government to encourage the provision of more of such services can correct for this problem.

Page 7: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

③Redirecting PrioritiesEach level of government has its own priori

ties in terms of the variety and quality of public services to be provided and the externalities to be corrected.

Sometimes higher levels of government attempt to override those priorities by mandating local governments to provide certain services.

Page 8: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

When the higher level of government simply orders a state or local government to perform certain functions or meet certain standards without offering to pay some of the cost, that order is known as an unfounded mandate.

When the services are largely funded and provided by a different level of government, grants can be a tool of persuasion for redirecting priorities.

Page 9: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

④Experimenting with New IdeasGrants are a particularly useful device in a

federal system because new ideas and programs can be tried out in one or more states or local areas on an experimental basis before being spread to other states if they are successful.

Page 10: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

3.The Choice of Tools 3.The Choice of Tools

Grants are just one way accomplishing the objectives of a higher level of government through partnership with other governments.

Sometimes direct expenditures are a good alternative, as with student loans and Medicare to provide health services for the elderly.

At other times, the incentives can be offered to individuals instead of other governments through tax expenditures.

The best choice of a tool depends on the nature of the objective being sought.

Page 11: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

44.. Types of GrantsTypes of Grants

Grants can be classified in many ways.①General Purpose or Categorical? A general purpose grant does not put many

constraints on how the funds may be spent. A categorical grant must be spent for a designated

use. A block grant consists of funds that must be used

within a broad category, but the recipient government has a great deal of flexibility about exactly how to spend the funds within that category.

Page 12: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

②Formula or Project?A formula grant is distributed according to

some set of criteria. They are about 71% of all federal grants.

A project grant is distributed according to designated recipients based on competitive applications or legislative discretion.

Page 13: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

③Lump Sum or Matching?Grants may be given as a lump sum or may

require matching contributions by the recipient government.

Matching grants change relative prices and generally have a stronger incentive effect toward the target objective than a lump-sum grant for the same purpose.

Page 14: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

④Open-ended or Closed-ended?An open-ended grant obligates the grantor

government to fund as many projects, recipients, or governments as meet the stated qualifications.

Close-ended grants have a specific budgeted amount that must be rationed among competing claimants through a grant application process, a formula, or some other distribution mechanism.

Page 15: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

55.. Efficiency and Equity Effects of GrEfficiency and Equity Effects of Grantsants

Equity is served by collecting from citizens in both rich and poor jurisdictions and redistributing a large share of the funds to jurisdictions with higher concentrations of low-income citizens.

Efficiency purposes of grants are much more complicated to analyze.

Page 16: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

①Indifference Analysis of GrantsFrom the standpoint of the donor

government, a grant is more efficient if it directs more resources toward the desired objective.

From the standpoint of the recipient government, efficiency means having the freedom to allocation resources in the way that will satisfy the desires of the citizens to whom it is accountable.

Page 17: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

②Lump-sum GrantsCitizens have increased their consumption

of publicly produced goods and services, but not by the full amount of the grant. Some of the increased revenue has come in the form of a reduction in taxes or other local revenue, leaving consumers more after-tax income to spend on private consumption.

Page 18: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

③Fungibility and Maintenance of Effort Fungibility is generally regarded by those who spe

nd the money as a good thing, because it gives them more flexibility.

But the donor government, or sometimes the citizens, may feel differently about giving them that kind of flexibility.

The most common solution to the fungibility problem for donor governments is to impose a maintenance-of-effort requirement.

Maintenance of effort is conceptually simple but difficult to administer in practice, particularly for continuous funding rather than a one-time grant.

Page 19: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

Figure 14-1 Lump Sum Grant

Page 20: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

④The Flypaper EffectThe flypaper effect finds that “money sticks

where it lands”. That is funds that are sent to the local public sector are spent there while funds that are sent to private citizens via tax relief are largely spent for private purposes, with only a limited amount finding its way into increased local public spending.

Page 21: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

66.. Matching Grants Matching Grants

A matching grant for a particular purpose will change the slope of the budget constraint, because available resources will now support more spending on the target purpose. Such a grant has both income and substitution effects and will have more impact in increasing spending on the target purpose than a lump-sum grant without a maintenance-of-effort requirement.

Page 22: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

True-false questions

If false, change the statement to make it true.

1.A categorical grant is preferable to a general purpose grant if the primary goal is fiscal equalization.

2.Horizontal equalization refers to grants intended to ensure that citizens have resources to provide the same level of basic services regardless of what city, county or school district they live in.

Page 23: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

3.If a grant is fungible, all of the increase in resources will be directed toward the purpose of the grant.

4.A maintenance of effort requirement is designed to make sure that the local government does not replace its own funds with grant funds when it receives a grant.

5.Formula grants are those that invite competitive applications and award money to the best projects.

Page 24: Chapter 14 Intergovernmental Grants in Theory and Practice Chapter outline 1 . The Growth and Decline of Federal Grants 2 . Purposes of Grants 3 . The

Answers:

1. F (The opposite is true.)

2. T

3. F (Fungibility means that it is possible to indirectly shift resources to other uses.)

4. T

5. F (Those are project grants, not formula grants.)