Austerity and Irish local government expenditure since the Great Recession
Date
2018-12-31Author
Turley, Gerard
McNena, Stephen
Robbins, Greraldine
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Turley, Gerard, McNena, Stephen, & Robbins, Geraldine. (2018). Austerity and Irish local government expenditure since the Great Recession. Administration, 66(4), 1-24. doi: 10.2478/admin-2018-0030
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Abstract
This paper sets out to establish the extent of austerity in the Irish local
government system during and after the Great Recession. Austerity is
measured by the adjusted change in local government expenditure from peak
to trough years, and is analysed by type of expenditure, service division and
local authority. Stripping out the change in local government current spending
that is due to expenditure reassignments reveals that the austerity-related
reduction in local government operating expenditure is not as large as often
portrayed. As for other findings, there are sizeable differences across the
aforementioned classifications, with, most notably, capital expenditure cuts far
exceeding cuts in current expenditure. The largest decreases in total spending
were on roads and housing services, and small rural county councils endured
the most austerity, as measured by the initial reductions in current
expenditure. In terms of policy implications, the biggest concern is the large
infrastructural deficit that needs to be tackled, arising from austerity cuts in
capital expenditure imposed at both central and local government level. As
the economy recovers from the Great Recession and the subsequent era of
austerity, failure to address this problem will hinder Ireland s international
competitiveness, constrain the economy s future growth rate and result in
impoverishment of public services at local level.