Controversy surrounds structural reform in local government, especially efforts aimed at involuntarily reducing the number of local authorities to secure scale economies. We examined whether scale economies exist in local government outlays by analyzing the expenditure of 152 New South Wales councils. Initially, council expenditure is characterized by scale economies. However, given the correlation between population and population density, it is important to determine whether the influence of population on expenditure is due to variations in population density. When areas are decomposed into subgroups on the basis of density, the evidence of scale economies largely disappears.
Journal article
Economies of scale and local government expenditure: evidence from Australia
Administration and Society, Vol.46(6), pp.632-653
2014
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Economies of scale and local government expenditure: evidence from Australia
- Creators
- Joseph Drew - University of New EnglandMichael A Kortt - Southern Cross UniversityBrian Dollery - University of New England
- Publication Details
- Administration and Society, Vol.46(6), pp.632-653
- Identifiers
- 1522; 991012821629202368
- Academic Unit
- Management; School of Business and Tourism; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
- Resource Type
- Journal article