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New England Public Policy Center
Working Paper No. 08-2 (A joint paper with the Research Department)
by Bo Zhao and Katharine
Bradbury
This paper designs a new equalization-aid formula based
on fiscal gaps of local communities. Using conceptual analysis
and simulations with Massachusetts data, the authors illustrate
the tradeoffs that policymakers face in deciding on the policy
variables in the formula and lay out several general guidelines
for setting up these variables. When states are in transition
to a new local aid formula, the issue of whether and how to
hold existing aid harmless poses a challenge. The authors
show that previous studies and the formulas derived from them
give differential weights to existing and new aid in filling
the gap and hence effectively treat communities receiving
greater amounts of existing aid more favorably than communities
receiving less or no existing aid. As a fairer alternative,
the authors propose a new approach that considers existing
and new aid within a consistent framework by taking account
of both in filling the gap. In addition, unlike previous research
that focuses only on a single years new aid distribution,
the authors simulate the dynamics of aid distributions over
multiple years and examine their evolution over time. The
authors further provide and compare several possible solutions
to addressing the possible tradeoffs between short-term and
long-term goals. Although the proposed aid formula is designed
for municipal aid and tailored to Massachusetts, the authors
note that foundation aid formulas for education implicitly
treat existing aid in the same way and suggest that the framework,
principles, and policy recommendations might also be applicable
to other states designing new municipal aid formulas.
Also released as Research
Department Working Paper No. 08-1.
Keywords: formula design, state aid formula, equalizing
aid, fiscal equalization
JEL Classifications: H70, H73, H77, H83
Full-text paper 
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