Brief description regrading this Resource Type
Other | 2011
IMFG Administrator Job Opening
IMFG has an opening for an Administrator. The deadline for applications is February 12, 2018.
Find out more »
Find out more »
Other | 2010
Economies of Scale in Ontario Municipal Services: Are Larger Municipalities Really More Efficient?
Adam Found
A presentation by Adam Found, the 2010 recipient of the Alan Broadbent Graduate Fellowship in Municipal Finance and Governance funded by the Diamante Development Corporation and Dr. James Wong, on April 21, 2010 at the Munk School for Global Affairs.
Find out more »
Find out more »
Other | 2009
Earmarked Grants and Accountability in Government
Richard M. Bird and Michael Smart
The conventional theory of fiscal federalism, which sees earmarking largely as a means to deal with positive spillovers in local expenditures, explains neither the level of such grants nor the trends over time. Nor can it readily account for the existence of non-matching, but still categorical, block grants. In this paper, we explore several alternative perspectives that interpret earmarking as a response to information failures between governments and, even more fundamentally, to accountability issues that arise between governments as well as between governments and voters.
Find out more »
Find out more »
Other | 2009
Provincial-Local Fiscal Transfers in Canada: Provincial Control Trumps Local Accountability
Enid Slack
This paper provides a case study of provincial-local transfers in Canada and evaluates the extent to which they are designed to increase local accountability or maintain provincial control. The evaluation is based, in part, on a review of trends in provincial transfers to municipalities and school boards over the last 20 years and, in part, on an assessment of the extent to which 3 grants are designed to satisfy the standard rationales for intergovernmental transfers found in the traditional fiscal federalism literature (vertical fiscal imbalance, horizontal fiscal imbalance, and externalities) or political rationales.
Find out more »
Find out more »
Other | 2009
Fiscal Reform and Rural Public Finance in China
Richard M. Bird, Loren Brandt, Scott Rozelle, and Linxiu Zhang
This paper presents a summary analysis of the important changes in township and village finance in China between 2000 and 2004, based on a survey of 100 villages in 50 townships in 25 counties in five provinces.
Find out more »
Find out more »
Other | 2009
The Maturing Metropolis: Governance in Toronto a Decade on from Amalgamation
André Côté
A paper by André Côté, a Masters student at the School of Public Policy and Governance and holder of the Alan Broadbent Fellowship in Municipal Finance and Governance.
Find out more »
Find out more »
Other | 2008
You Get What You Pay For: How Nordic Cities Are Financed
Jorgen Lotz
Co-sponsored by the Toronto Community Foundation, on March 5, 2008, with a presentation by Danish economist Jorgen Lotz, and panelists Glen Murray, President and CEO, Canadian Urban Institute, and Mario Lefebvre, Director of the Centre for Municipal Studies at the Conference Board of Canada.
Find out more »
Find out more »
Other | 2006
The Impact of Municipal Finance and Governance on Urban Sprawl
Enid Slack
This paper assesses the impact of municipal financial tools and governance on the pattern of urban growth. The first part considers how financing tools can affect urban growth patterns and analyzes the impact of four specific financing tools: development charges, property taxes, user fees, and tax increment financing. The second part considers the role played by local governance on urban growth patterns. The third part provides some concluding comments on approaches to finance and governance that could improve the prospects for compact development.
Find out more »
Find out more »