When we look at the Milwaukee County data between 1990 and 2006, a surprising dynamic emerges. Jobs and tax rate have a positive statistical relationship. Go figure. For you stats geeks, the Pearson’s correlation coefficient is 0.536 and statistically significant (p<0.05).
A forum, news site and archive begun in February, 2007 about politics and the environment in Wisconsin. And elsewhere.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Guest Post About County Fiscal Policy And Jobs
I'm happy to post the work of Ph.D candidate John Kovari, who has worked in City Hall and at the Public Policy Forum.
We need more polished, young thinkers like this.
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Lately I’ve been using economic data for some research on economic development, and curiosity led me to test some political assumptions that have popped up recently.
Always heartwarming to see a Poli-Sci Egghead acting like they understands economics.
ReplyDeleteAnd using questionable & inappropriate statistics to support their conclusions is just a standard part of the bureaucratic playbook.
The county has a fiscal policy? Ha.
ReplyDeleteNice post. Correlation doesn't equal causation. I think the other
factors that he mentioned, and especially the state of the larger
economy, are going to overwhelm any positive or negative effect that
relatively minor changes in local property tax may have on local jobs.
You'd have to try to cancel out larger factors - national GDP and state taxes/incentives for example - to even have a chance to look at the relevance of local taxes. For all we know, it could be that the
national economy took Milwaukee down in those years, but county tax
cuts made the downward spiral less significant than it would have otherwise been. Doubt it, but you can't tell.