Lotteries, the American states and the federal government: A formula for perpetual success or inevitable destruction in education policy?

Lotteries, the American states and the federal government: A formula for perpetual success or inevitable destruction in education policy?

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Article ID: iaor200334
Country: United States
Volume: 14
Issue: 1
Start Page Number: 27
End Page Number: 52
Publication Date: Jan 2002
Journal: Journal of Public Budgeting, Accounting and Financial Management
Authors: ,
Keywords: government, planning, education, politics, statistics: regression
Abstract:

Lotteries have gained immense popularity for enhancing fiscal resources for social intervention programs such as education. However, the fiscal significance of lotteries for accomplishing educational equity across the American states has been empirically challenged. Much of the literature on lotteries suggests that financial reliance on state operated lotteries for educational embellishment may actually hinder the process of educational egalitarianism. Through pooled time series regression analysis, this project intends to demonstrate that states earmarking lottery dollars for education are receiving fewer fiscal allocations for education from the federal government than states opting to by-pass adoption of a lottery for education. The data for this project will include fourteen variables over a twenty-year period covering all fifty states.

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