Defining Equal Standards in Local Public Services
- 1 October 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Studies
- Vol. 23 (5) , 391-412
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00420988620080571
Abstract
This paper explores different interpretations of the notion of equal standards in local public services, as applied to the systematic distribution of resources between localities. After discussing the context and goals of public resource distribution between territories, a typology of standards is defined and analysed in terms of simple microeconomic theory. From this analysis are drawn some conclusions about the applicability of different standards to different kinds of service and about systematic territorial distributional effects related to income and urban-rural character. The discussion is illustrated with examples drawn from United Kingdom systems including the Rate Support Grant. In the concluding section it is argued that standards should be explicit and that consistency with key value judgements should guide the choice of standards.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Grant‐related expenditure and the inner cityLocal Government Studies, 1984
- The Economics of Social CarePublished by Springer Nature ,1984
- Economics Without Economic Man?Social Policy & Administration, 1983
- Housing (Dis?) Investment ProgrammesPolicy & Politics, 1983
- Central City Decline and the Provision of Education ServicesUrban Studies, 1982
- Block Grant: Some Unresolved IssuesPolicy & Politics, 1981
- A CRITIQUE OF EQUALISING GRANTS TO LOCAL GOVERNMENTSScottish Journal of Political Economy, 1980
- Territorial Need Indicators: A New Approach Part IJournal of Social Policy, 1980
- Distributional Considerations in Models of Government Service ProvisionUrban Affairs Quarterly, 1977
- Urban OutcomesPublished by University of California Press ,1974