W. Moesen et P. Van Cauwenberge, The status of the budget constraint, federalism and the relative size of government: A bureaucracy approach, PUBL CHOICE, 104(3-4), 2000, pp. 207-224
We develop a model along the lines of Niskanen, articulating that under a s
oft government budget constraint the full production cost of the public goo
d is not reflected in the tax price as perceived by the consumer-taxpayer-v
oter. Various proportions of non-tax financing and different degrees of vot
er myopia with respect to discounting the future tax liabilities are taken
into account. It can be shown that both the actual level of public output a
nd the amount of slack resources are lower under a hard budget constraint t
han under a soft budget regime. Lower levels of government typically operat
e under a hard budget constraint when compared with the federal level since
they have only limited (public) borrowing opportunities and no access to m
oney creation (seignorage). In a federalist setting more government decisio
ns are taken under a hard budget constraint than in a unitary state. Hence
one would expect that the overall size of government is relatively smaller
in a structure with fiscal federalism. An empirical test for 19 OECD-countr
ies (1990-1992) seems to support this hypothesis.