Neighborhood Effects

State and Local Public Policy from the Mercatus Center

Menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • About Neighborhood Effects
  • About the Bloggers

Assorted Links

Rutgers-Eagleton poll: “N.J. isn’t spending enough on schools.”

The “77% of Income Fallacy”.

Home prices fall in nearly half of U.S. Metro Areas.

e-Books and the illusion of ownership.

This entry was posted in State Policy and tagged metro areas, spending on November 11, 2010 by Eileen Norcross.

Post navigation

← New Jersey’s Drop-Dead Date on Pensions Can a reduction in government spending stimulate the economy? →
Neighborhood Effects | Mercatus Center

About

American state and local economic policy and political economy from the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. Read more

Search

Categories

Archives

Tags

budget budgets California community construction consumption county economic development economy GDP growth health care Illinois labor local governments make Maryland Mercatus Center New Jersey New York New York City New York Times pension pension plans percent policymakers President Obama reform regulation research retirement Rhode Island spending state budget state governments tax tax rates Texas union unions United States US vote wall street journal Washington Post

Blogroll

  • Cafe Hayek
  • Carpe Diem
  • Cato @ Liberty
  • Center for Business and Public Policy
  • Confounded Interest
  • Coordination Problem
  • Division of Labour
  • EconLog
  • Economix
  • Everything Finance
  • Free Exchange
  • Greg Mankiw's Blog
  • John Taylor, Economics One
  • Kids Prefer Cheese
  • Knowledge Problem
  • Marginal Revolution
  • Market Urbanism
  • Megan McArdle
  • Newsmarksdoor
  • Overcoming Bias
  • Pileus
  • Public Sector Inc.
  • Supply and Demand (In That Order)
  • Tax Policy Blog
  • The Agitator
  • The Big Questions
  • The Grumpy Economist
  • The Money Illusion
  • The Rational Optimist, Matt Ridley
  • The Volokh Conspiracy
  • ThinkMarkets
  • Will Wilkinson

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
Proudly powered by WordPress