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Fiscal Management Implications of the TABOR Bind
by
Martell, Christine R.
, Teske, Paul
in
1120
/ 4230
/ 9130
/ 9190
/ Amendments
/ Bill of Rights-US
/ Colorado
/ Comparative analysis
/ Earmarks
/ Economic growth
/ Economic policy & planning
/ Economic recessions
/ Expenditure
/ Expenditures
/ Experiment/theoretical treatment
/ Fiscal Policy
/ Funding
/ Government budgets
/ Government spending
/ Higher education
/ Limitations
/ Local Government
/ Management
/ Personal income
/ Personal taxation
/ Politics
/ Privatization
/ Property taxes
/ Public administration
/ Recessions
/ Revenue
/ Rights
/ Spotlight on Public Finance
/ State
/ State budgets
/ State government
/ Studies
/ Tax collection
/ Taxation
/ Taxes
/ Taxpayer Bill of Rights
/ United States
/ United States History
/ Weather
2007
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Fiscal Management Implications of the TABOR Bind
by
Martell, Christine R.
, Teske, Paul
in
1120
/ 4230
/ 9130
/ 9190
/ Amendments
/ Bill of Rights-US
/ Colorado
/ Comparative analysis
/ Earmarks
/ Economic growth
/ Economic policy & planning
/ Economic recessions
/ Expenditure
/ Expenditures
/ Experiment/theoretical treatment
/ Fiscal Policy
/ Funding
/ Government budgets
/ Government spending
/ Higher education
/ Limitations
/ Local Government
/ Management
/ Personal income
/ Personal taxation
/ Politics
/ Privatization
/ Property taxes
/ Public administration
/ Recessions
/ Revenue
/ Rights
/ Spotlight on Public Finance
/ State
/ State budgets
/ State government
/ Studies
/ Tax collection
/ Taxation
/ Taxes
/ Taxpayer Bill of Rights
/ United States
/ United States History
/ Weather
2007
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Do you wish to request the book?
Fiscal Management Implications of the TABOR Bind
by
Martell, Christine R.
, Teske, Paul
in
1120
/ 4230
/ 9130
/ 9190
/ Amendments
/ Bill of Rights-US
/ Colorado
/ Comparative analysis
/ Earmarks
/ Economic growth
/ Economic policy & planning
/ Economic recessions
/ Expenditure
/ Expenditures
/ Experiment/theoretical treatment
/ Fiscal Policy
/ Funding
/ Government budgets
/ Government spending
/ Higher education
/ Limitations
/ Local Government
/ Management
/ Personal income
/ Personal taxation
/ Politics
/ Privatization
/ Property taxes
/ Public administration
/ Recessions
/ Revenue
/ Rights
/ Spotlight on Public Finance
/ State
/ State budgets
/ State government
/ Studies
/ Tax collection
/ Taxation
/ Taxes
/ Taxpayer Bill of Rights
/ United States
/ United States History
/ Weather
2007
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Journal Article
Fiscal Management Implications of the TABOR Bind
2007
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Overview
Following a wave of state-adopted tax and expenditure limitations (TELs), in 1992 the state of Colorado amended its constitution with the strictest TEL to date. Called the Taxpayer Bill of Rights and known as TABOR, the amendment has limited the size and scope of Colorado governments. Praised as a restraint on unbridled government growth in good economic times, TABOR reared its highly restrictive head as the state economy turned downward. The central issue explored is how binding tax and expenditure limitations affect the state's ability to weather economic recessions and employ sound fiscal management practices. As in most institutional arrangements, the devil is in the details. The analysis presented here reveals that binding limitations create perverse incentives for budgetary actors to earmark, privatize, and shift responsibilities to other jurisdictions, which ultimately combine to reduce the state government's ability to perform and to maintain sound fiscal management practices.
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