4.5 Article

Post-great recession municipal budgeting and governance: A mixed methods analysis of budget stress and reform

Journal

ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE
Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages 634-652

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0308518X211068051

Keywords

Urban governance; municipal budgets; austerity; recession; urban geography

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This study aims to move beyond previous discussions about austerity urbanism by conducting a longitudinal analysis of municipal budget data in the U.S. The research found both nationwide trends in budgetary change and divergent budget narratives in cases of severe municipal fiscal distress, highlighting the complexity of U.S. urban governance.
The Great Recession hit several U.S. cities hard. Facing large revenue losses, these cities undertook dramatic spending cuts and utilized rarely used restructuring tools. This led some to speculate that these were exemplars of austerity urbanism. Subsequent work has contested this interpretation, arguing instead that cities have generally pursued pragmatic, not austere, reform. This paper seeks to move beyond this impasse, developing a mixed methods longitudinal analysis of quantitative and qualitative municipal budget data. Quantitative data is drawn from the U.S. Census of Local Government (2006-2016) and is used identify statistical relationships between budget health and budget composition in a nationwide sample (n = 1,449) of municipalities. Then follows a qualitative analysis of budget narrative data from the six most fiscally distressed large and medium sized U.S. cities. The paper therefore identifies commonalities in post-Great Recession urban governance (i) in a large nationwide sample of cities and (ii) within a small group of extreme cases. The research found weak nationwide trends in budgetary change and divergent budget narratives in cases of severe municipal fiscal distress. We argue this means three things for understanding U.S. urban governance. First, the tracing of superficially similar local budget reforms to a single political economic descriptor is misplaced. Second, U.S. municipal budgetary reforms are relational, outcomes of both local and extra-local diagnosis, interpretation, and mediation. Third, and finally, decisions to introduce local austerity policies stem not just from outside. This paper therefore shows the potential intellectual returns of in-depth, case-study research on U.S. urban governance and finance.

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