|
The Political Economy Of Financing Scottish Government |
C. Paul Hallwood, University of Connecticut, US and Ronald MacDonald, Adam Smith Professor of Political Economy, University of Glasgow, UK
|
|
|
Can the UK survive widespread dissatisfaction in both Scotland and England with the financing of public spending by Scotland’s parliament? This timely book explains how fiscal autonomy could raise economic growth and efficiency in Scotland – to the benefit of both Scotland and the rest of the United Kingdom. The authors discuss how other reform proposals – which amount to cutting Scotland’s block grant – would fail as they would not be seen in Scotland as legitimate. They conclude that fiscal autonomy would be accepted as it reduces Scotland’s democratic deficit in public spending, and would go a long way toward reducing vertical and horizontal imbalances in the UK.
|
Contents: Foreword by Drew Scott Preface 1. Introduction 2. Searching for a Politically and Economically Rational Public Funding Model for Scotland 3. The Economic Case for Fiscal Devolution 4. Objectives of an Effective Fiscal Federal System 5. Fiscal Federalism: A Scottish Perspective 6. The Case for Scottish Fiscal Autonomy 7. A Restatement of the Case for Scottish Fiscal Autonomy 8. Fiscal Devolution in Some Other Countries 9. Empirical Evidence: Tax Devolution and Prosperity 10. A Separate Currency for Scotland? 11. Conclusion Bibliography Index
|
This book is part of the Studies in Fiscal Federalism and State–local Finance series. To view the rest of the series, please use the link.
View
Studies in Fiscal Federalism and State–local Finance series books 
View More Information 
|
|