University of Illinois Legal Working Paper Series

University of Illinois Law and Economics Working Papers

 

The Economics of Federalism

Larry E. Ribstein, University of Illinois
Bruce H. Kobayashi, George Mason University School of Law

Abstract

This is the introductory essay for the Economics of Federalism, a book edited by the authors and forthcoming in Edward Elgar Publishing’s ECONOMIC APPROACHES TO LAW series. This essay discusses the major issues and theories concerning federal political systems, which we define as systems that have a hierarchy of at least two distinct “state” and “central” levels, each with a well-defined scope of authority. The essay discusses two branches the economics literature. The first branch, on competitive federalism, stems from Tiebout’s 1956 article. It focuses on the horizontal structure of federalism and examines jurisdictional competition between state governments for mobile individuals and resources. The second branch of the literature, on fiscal federalism, examines the vertical structure of federalism, or the division of public services and taxing power between the central and state governments. The essay also examines applications of the economic analysis of federalism to specific areas of the law, including corporate law, antitrust law, environmental law, choice of law rules, contractual choice of law, and public choice theory.

Subject Area

Law and Economics

Recommended Citation

Larry E. Ribstein and Bruce H. Kobayashi, "The Economics of Federalism" (January 2006). University of Illinois Legal Working Paper Series. University of Illinois Law and Economics Working Papers. Working Paper 49.
http://law.bepress.com/uiuclwps/papers/art49

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