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Books > Business & Economics > Finance & accounting > Finance > Public finance
Governments have always endured economic woes, but the increasing
severity of such challenges, from the Great Recession starting in
2008 to the unprecedented impact of the COVID-19 pandemic,
highlights the need for better-developed fiscal analysis capacity
in governments of all sizes using the most practical-yet
robust-techniques available. This volume presents an array of
real-world analytical approaches in a variety of service areas at
the core of state and local government. The concrete insights
provided by this book serve as important tools for policy analysts,
government officials charged with policy implementation, and public
finance scholars across developing and developed countries looking
for the essential, high-level analytical skills needed to expand
internal capacity to weather uncertain economic environments. The
book bridges the research-practice gap and provides practical tools
for state and local fiscal analysis, including a detailed how-to
guide for producing local tax expenditure reports, an age-based
homestead exemption estimate calculator with guide, and simple
methods for fuzzy matching administrative data. It is backed up
with a depth and breadth of case studies on governments of a
variety of sizes. Public officials and analysts in local
state/regional institutions and international institutions with a
public policy focus as well as public finance scholars across
developing and developed countries will find invaluable the
analyses and tools provided by this book. It also serves as a key
resource for students, researchers, and instructors across public
policy.
Public private partnerships (PPPs) have been a controversial
approach to procuring public infrastructure services. Against a
background of recent trenchant criticism of PPPs, Mervyn K. Lewis,
a leading scholar in the area, re-examines their utility. He
questions what PPPs can and cannot do, why governments choose this
route and whether PPPs can ever be good value for money. The author
analyses the extensive use of PPPs for hospitals and transport
megaprojects and outlines the key challenges to implementing them,
shaping the future direction of the PPP model. Exploring the
psychological influences on decision-making, the book also puts a
new focus on the people delivering the project; it is not only a
matter of selecting the right model. Professor Lewis concludes
that, although the PPP model remains problematic, if chosen
appropriately every procurement approach has its place in good
policy. Providing an in-depth exploration of the features of PPPs
and the complexities of megaprojects, Rethinking Public Private
Partnerships will be of considerable interest to academics and
students of public policy, economic regulation and governance, and
public finance. Its re-assessment of the field will also prove
invaluable for government procurers, advisory firms and PPP
experts.
Based on the synthesis of a large empirical and theoretical
literature on center-region relations in China and Russia,
Federalism in China and Russia is one of the first attempts to
integrate this literature from different disciplines into a
coherent common framework. Libman and Rochlitz argue that the
divergence in growth performance between Russia and China can be -
at least partially - explained by a number of features of the
Chinese system of center-regional relations. The authors offer a
comparative analysis of the development of center-region relations
in Russia and in China and explore several dimensions of these
relations: fiscal ties and incentives; bureaucratic practices;
flows of information; and local government practices, while
addressing the determinants of divergence between both countries.
They also examine how the Chinese system has recently started to
change, by adopting several features of the Russian model, which
might be one of the reasons for China's declining growth
performance in recent years. Federalism in China and Russia should
be read by scholars in public economics, political economy and
comparative politics, as well as by students and policy analysts.
For scholars, the book serves as a point of reference in studying
the comparative evolution of the two countries. It will enrich the
discussion on fiscal federalism, center-region relations and
sub-national political regimes, and could potentially become an
important part of syllabi in political economy, public economics
and comparative politics courses. For policy analysts, the book
offers a comprehensive survey of the evolution of center-periphery
relations of the two countries and the differences between them,
which is important to better understand the overall development of
Russia and China.
Focusing on the developing economic challenges confronting Korea
and the US in response to the aging of their populations, this
timely book examines how public policies are evolving in light of
demographic changes, the impact of aging on governmental
expenditures, and transitions in the labor force associated with
aging. International contributors comparatively analyze government
approaches to population aging, illustrating the similar challenges
faced across nations. Chapters draw attention to those particular
issues that public policy plans must surmount, including funding
pressures on retirement plans and the effects of an aging labor
force on economic growth and productivity. They offer evidence on
the scale of these challenges in Korea and the US and empirically
evaluate how governments, employers, and individuals may respond to
these issues in the years to come. Addressing fiscal sustainability
and key social security programs, including the implications of the
2015 Korean pension reform and the economic difficulties entailed
by the future of Medicare, this book investigates the implications
of managing and sustaining welfare for an aging population. This
cutting-edge book will be ideal reading for economists focusing on
public policy and welfare programs, benefiting from the comparative
approach to fiscal accountability and sustainability. It will also
appeal to practitioners and policymakers seeking insights into the
consequences of an aging population and hoping to develop
innovative methods and approaches to welfare.
This book's eminent editors and contributing authors provide an
accessible and engaging account of the 'new' politics of corporate
taxation, highlighting the complex and multidimensional strategies
used by activists to influence public opinion, formal regulation
and corporate behaviour. While campaigning is successful at
exposing tax avoidance, it presents significant governance
challenges. As this book reveals, the battle to establish fair and
sustainable corporate tax regimes has only just begun. Chapters
offer readers a timely assessment of the emerging role of new tax
justice NGOs, the media and whistleblowers, as well as new
governance strategies and policies targeting multinational
corporations. Through the lens of political science, the authors
show how civil society organisations shape the agenda of tax
practices of the world's largest and most powerful corporations,
including examples such as Apple and Google. A detailed evaluation
is given of new private governance initiatives in the international
tax arena and their relationship with traditional forms of
regulation. Looking closely at the wider significance of the debate
in contemporary global governance, academics and graduates in the
fields of international political economy, global governance,
development studies and taxation will find this book a timely and
thought-provoking read. Contributors: A. Christians, R. Eccleston,
A. Elbra, F. Gale, L. Johnson, A. Kellow, L. Latulippe, J. Mikler,
H. Murphy-Gregory, T. Porter, K. Ronit, L. Seabrooke, L. Smith, J.
Van Alstine, D. Wigan, R. Woodward
Businesses, philanthropies and non-profit entities are increasingly
successful in capturing public funds to support private provision
of schooling in developed and developing countries. Coupled with
market-based reforms that include weak regulation, control over
workforces, standardization of processes and economies of scale,
private provision of schooling is often seen to be convenient for
both public authorities and businesses. This book examines how the
public subsidization of these forms of private education affects
quality, equality and the realization of human rights. With
original research from leading experts, The State, Business and
Education sheds light on the privatization of education in fragile
circumstances. It illustrates the ways in which private actors have
expanded their involvement in education as a business, and shows
the influence of policy borrowing on the spread of for-profit
education. Case studies from Argentina, Bangladesh, Brazil, China,
India and Syrian refugee camps illustrate the ways in which private
actors have expanded their involvement in education as a business.
This book will be of interest not only to academics and students of
international and comparative education, but also to education
development professionals in both the private and public sectors,
with its empirical assessment of case studies, and careful
consideration of the lessons to be learned from each. Contributors
include: M. Avelar, J. Barkan, M. de Koning, A. Draxler, C.
Fontdevila, S. Kamat, F. Menashy, M.C. Moschetti, E. Richardson, B.
Schulte, C.A. Spreen, G. Steiner-Khamsi, A. Verger, Z. Zakharia, A.
Zancajo
The public finance branch of economics has seen a great deal of
change in prevailing attitudes regarding the role of the market and
the role of government in countries with democratic institutions
and market economies. Different functions have been added, over the
past century, and especially after World War II, to the role that
the government should play. The laissez faire ideology of the past,
that minimized the government role, was progressively abandoned
until the last two decades of the 20th century, when there was an
attempt to reduce the ambitious role that the government had
assumed, and to give a growing role back to the market. This book
explains how changes in both the market and the government have
made public finance a more challenging, interesting and at times
frustrating branch of economics. It provides a cosmopolitan
perspective and details the part that historical developments have
played in shaping modern views. The author explores the real life,
practical nature of public finance and de-emphasizes the role of
armchair theorizing by focusing on real issues that are seen from a
community rather than an individualistic perspective. The Advanced
Introduction to Public Finance offers a fresh look at the field for
students, researchers and policymakers in economics, public
administration, taxation, policy and economic history.
Handbook of Economic Stagnation takes a broad view, including
contributions from orthodox and heterodox economists who examine
situations in countries and worldwide regions, including Japan and
the Euro area. To be sure, stagnation is periodically relieved by
short economic bursts usually brought on by unsustainable asset
price bubbles. Once the bubbles burst, stagnation returns. This
book's fresh, comprehensive approach to the topic makes it the
premier source for anyone affected by these cycles.
Large infrastructure projects often face significant cost overruns
and stakeholder fragmentation. Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs)
allow governments to procure long-term infrastructure services from
private providers, rather than developing, financing and managing
infrastructure assets themselves. Aligning public and private
interests and institutional logics to create robust, decades-long
service contracts subject to shifting economic and political
contexts is a significant cross-sectoral governance challenge. This
work summarizes over a decade of research conducted by scholars at
Stanford s Global Projects Center and multiple US and International
collaborators to enhance the governance of both infrastructure
projects and institutional investors, whose long term, cash flow
obligations align especially well with the kinds of long term
inflation-adjusted returns that PPP infrastructure projects can
generate. In these pages, multiple theoretical perspectives are
integrated and combined with empirical evidence to examine how
experiences from more mature PPP jurisdictions can help improve PPP
governance approaches worldwide. The information contained here
will appeal to engineering, economics, political science, public
policy and finance scholars interested in the delivery of
high-quality, sustainable infrastructure services to the citizens
in countries with established and emerging market economies.
Officials in national, state/provincial and local government
agencies seeking alternative financing and service provision
strategies for their civil and social infrastructure, and
legislators and their staff members interested in promoting PPP
legislation will find this book invaluable. It will also be of high
interest to long-term investment professionals from pension funds,
sovereign funds, family offices and university endowments seeking
to deploy money into the infrastructure asset class, and
practitioners seeking insights into methods for enhancing
stakeholder incentive alignment, reducing transaction costs and
improving project outcomes in PPPs. Contributors: B.G. Cameron, G.
Carollo, C.B. Casady, E.F. Crawley, K. Eriksson, W. Feng, M.J.
Garvin, K.E. Gasparro, R.R. Geddes, W.J. Henisz, D.R. Lessard, R.E.
Levitt, T. Liu, A.H.B. Monk, D.A. Nguyen, C. Nowacki, W.R. Scott,
R. Sharma, A.J. South
Innovative in its approach, Rethinking Public Choice reviews the
concept of public choice since the 1950s post-war period and the
application of economics to political practices and institutions,
as well as its evolution in recent years attracting contributions
from political science and philosophy. Examining the growing
variety of theoretical orientations on the topic, such as entangled
political economy and additive political economy, the book provides
new analytical insights into combining the old and new to establish
a more unified political economy. Richard E. Wagner expertly
highlights the key issues an entangled economy can bring, including
incomplete information and its constant evolution as it reflects
ever changing public choice ideas. Wagner seeks to extend the reach
of public choice by distinguishing the formal idea of rationality
that has dominated public choice from the immensely varied practice
of human action that opens up now directions for public choice.
This insightful approach will prove an excellent resource for
academics and scholars of economics and political science, as well
as those within the field of public administration as it offers an
excellent blend of all subjects.
Public Finance is a part of multi-disciplinary scientific field
focusing on challenging issues that are significantly important for
the common good of humanity. Since the appearance of the states,
public goods, public services, and public policies have been
developed for the wealth and goodness of people all over the world.
Although the privatization process has gained significant speed
since the era of Neoliberalism, the state power collaborating with
international monitoring institutions to struggle against
challenging issues is needed now more than ever. Therefore, public
economics should be focused on the new challenging issues such as
pandemics, global warming and climate changes. This book evaluates
the economic and social impacts of new challenging issues in public
economics. The new challenging issues in public economics, such as
global warming and the global pandemic, have directly affected the
world economy in terms of the economic units, institutions and
social life. Therefore, this book is appropriate for social science
scholars, government officials, policy makers and, businessmen of
international companies that focused on environmental policies, and
more.
The budget has been among the most pressing topics facing Brussels
throughout the history of the EU. Features and Challenges of the EU
Budget proposes a timely analysis of the most pertinent issues
surrounding the EU budget with a multidisciplinary approach that
includes historical, political, legal and economic interpretations.
This thought provoking book considers the history of the EU budget
and the European integration process, offering insight into the
broader political implications of the budget for both Member State
governments and for their citizens. Features and Challenges of the
EU Budget also explores the legal and economic repercussions of the
EU budget, examines the framework that controls it, and
interrogates the budget's effects on European growth and
competitiveness alongside its significance to the structural
balances of Member States. At a time of uncertainty for the EU,
this book provides a critical investigation of how political
factors will affect the future of the EU budget. Featuring the
unique contributions of academics from a range of disciplinary
backgrounds, this insightful work will be of great interest to
scholars and students investigating the politics, structure and
economics of the EU. This book will also be useful to institutions
offering courses or programmes concerning the EU and its budget.
Contributors include: P. Becker, A. Isoni, R. Kaiser, M. Koelling,
K. Mause, E. Perreau, M. Pierri, M. Schratzenstaller, M. Scotto, U.
Villani-Lubelli, L. Zamparini
Health Insurance Systems: An International Comparison offers united
and synthesized information currently available only in scattered
locations - if at all - to students, researchers, and policymakers.
The book provides helpful contexts, so people worldwide can
understand various healthcare systems. By using it as a guide to
the mechanics of different healthcare systems, readers can examine
existing systems as frameworks for developing their own. Case
examples of countries adopting insurance characteristics from other
countries enhance the critical insights offered in the book. If
more information about health insurance alternatives can lead to
better decisions, this guide can provide an essential service.
Master the most important areas of today's tax law with
Whittenburg/Gill's best-selling INCOME TAX FUNDAMENTALS 2023. This
concise, practical introduction to tax preparation uses a unique,
step-by-step workbook format that integrates real, current examples
and uses the most recent actual tax forms. You learn the
complexities of the U.S. income tax code as this edition's clear,
up-to-date presentation walks you through the most recent tax laws,
revisions and changes. Updated end-of-chapter problems and online
exercises let you practice completing tax return problems using
real source documents identical to those of actual clients. You
also learn to use professional Intuit (R) ProConnect (TM) tax
preparation software that accompanies each new book. In addition,
study tools and helpful resources within the CNOWv2 online homework
tool help you further refine your knowledge and practical skills to
become a successful tax preparer.
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