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Alberto Alesina, Reza Baqir, William Easterly, Public Goods and Ethnic Divisions, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 114, Issue 4, November 1999, Pages 1243–1284, https://doi.org/10.1162/003355399556269
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Abstract
We present a model that links heterogeneity of preferences across ethnic groups in a city to the amount and type of public goods the city supplies. We test the implications of the model with three related data sets: U. S. cities, U. S. metropolitan areas, and U. S. urban counties. Results show that the shares of spending on productive public goods—education, roads, sewers and trash pickup—in U. S. cities (metro areas/urban counties) are inversely related to the city's (metro area's/county's) ethnic fragmentation, even after controlling for other socioeconomic and demographic determinants. We conclude that ethnic conflict is an important determinant of local public finances.