This paper proposes a positive model of public sector resource allocation for goods where quality, as well as quantity, is a salient dimension. The model views decisions about quality, quantity, and total expenditures as occurring within a ‘zone of contention’, bounded by minimum requirements for quality and quantity - reflecting technological, regulatory and legal constraints - and a maximum ceiling on total expenditures. The model is consistent with a number of alternative views of the political market place. It is formally derived from a Stone- Geary-type objective function. For purposes of estimation, the model can be transformed into a special case of the CALM model [Fischer and Kamlet (1984)]. The identification requirements for the CALM model are derived. The model is then applied to state expenditures on mental hospitals. (April 1986)
Journal of Public Economics
1986
Frank RG and Kamlet MS
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