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References for Does government spending crowd out voluntary labor and donations?
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Further reading
- Andreoni, J., Payne, A. "Charitable giving" In: Auerbach, A. J., Chetty, R., Feldstein, M., Saez, E. (eds). Handbook of Public Economics. Volume 5. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2013.
- Versterlund, L. "Using experimental methods to understand why and how we give to charity" In: Kagel, J., Roth, A. (eds). The Handbook of Experimental Economics. Volume 2. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016.
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Key references
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Boberg-Fazlic, N., Sharp, P. "Does welfare
spending crowd out charitable activity? Evidence from Historical
England under the poor laws" The Economic
Journal 127:599 (2017): 50–83. Key reference: [1]
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Bauer, T., Bredtmann, J., Schmidt, C. M. "Time vs. money:
The supply of voluntary labor and charitable donations across
Europe" European Journal
of Political Economy 32 (2013): 80–94. Key reference: [2]
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Roberts, R. "A positive model
of private charity and public transfers" Journal of
Political Economy 92:1 (1984): 136–148. Key reference: [3]
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Duncan, B. "Modeling
charitable contributions of time and money" Journal of Public
Economics 72:2 (1999): 213–242. Key reference: [4]
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Andreoni, J. "Impure altruism
and donations to public goods: A theory of warm-glow
giving" The Economic
Journal 100:401 (1990): 464–477. Key reference: [5]
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Bolton, G., Katok, E. "An experimental
test of the crowding out hypothesis: The nature of beneficent
behavior" Journal of
Economic Behavior and Organization 37:3 (1998): 315–331. Key reference: [6]
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Evren, Ö., Minardi, S. "Warm-glow giving
and freedom to be selfish" The Economic
Journal 127:603 (2017): 1381–1409. Key reference: [7]
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Hungerman, D. M., Ottoni-Wilhelm, M. "Impure impact
giving: Theory and evidence" Journal of
Political Economy 129:5 (2021): 1553–1614. Key reference: [8]
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Andreoni, J., Payne, A. A. "Is crowding out
due entirely to fundraising? Evidence from a panel of
charities" Journal of Public
Economics 95:5–6 (2011): 334–343. Key reference: [9]
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Jones, D. B. "Education's
gambling problem: Earmarked lottery revenues and charitable
donations to education" Economic
Inquiry 53:2 (2015): 906–921. Key reference: [10]
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Duquette, N. J. "Do tax incentives
affect charitable contributions? Evidence from public charities’
reported revenues" Journal of Public
Economics 137 (2016): 51–69. Key reference: [11]
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Hackl, F., Halla, M., Pruckner, G. J. "Volunteering and
the state" Public
Choice 151:3 (2012): 465–495. Key reference: [12]
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De Wit, A., Neumayr, M., Handy, F., Wiepking, P. "Do government
expenditures shift private philanthropic donations to particular
fields of welfare? Evidence from cross-country data" European
Sociological Review 34:1 (2018): 6–21. Key reference: [13]
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Crumpler, H., Grossman, P. "An experimental
test of warm glow giving" Journal of Public
Economics 92:5 (2008): 1011–1021. Key reference: [14]
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Ottoni-Wilhelm, M., Vesterlund, L., Xie, H. "Why do people
give? Testing pure and impure altruism" American Economic
Review 107:11 (2017): 3617–3633. Key reference: [15]
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Boberg-Fazlic, N., Sharp, P. "Does welfare
spending crowd out charitable activity? Evidence from Historical
England under the poor laws" The Economic
Journal 127:599 (2017): 50–83.
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Additional References
- Abrams, B., Schmitz, M. D. "The crowding-out effect of governmental transfers on private charitable contributions: Cross-section evidence" National Tax Journal 37:4 (1984): 563–568.
- Aldashev, G., Jaimovich, E., Verdier, T. "Small is beautiful: Motivational allocation in the nonprofit sector" Journal of the European Economic Association 16:3 (2018): 730–780.
- Andreoni, J., Serra-Garcia, M. "Time inconsistent charitable giving" Journal of Public Economics (2021).
- Andreoni, J., Payne, A. A. "Is crowding out due entirely to fundraising? Evidence from a panel of charities" Journal of Public Economics 95:5–6 (2011): 334–343.
- Bielefeld, W., Rooney, P., Steinberg, K. "How do need, capacity, geography, and politics influence giving?" In: Brooks, A. C. (ed). Gifts of Time and Money: The Role of Charity in America's Communities. Volume 1. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2005.
- Bönke, T., Massarrat-Mashhadi, N., Sielaff, C. "Charitable giving in the German welfare state: Fiscal incentives and crowding out" Public Choice 154:1 (2013): 39–58.
- Brooks, A. "The effects of public policy on private charity" Administration & Society 36:2 (2004): 166–185.
- Chan, K., Godby, R., Mestelman, S., Muller, R. "Crowding-out voluntary contributions to public goods" Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 48:3 (2002): 305–317.
- de Witt, A., Bekkers, R. "Government support and charitable donations: A meta-analysis of the crowding-out hypothesis" Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 27:2 (2017): 301–319.
- Eckel, C., Grossman, P., Johnston, R. "An experimental test of the crowding out hypothesis" Journal of Public Economics 89:8 (2005): 1543–1560.
- Feldman, N. "Time is money: Choosing between charitable activities" American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 2:1 (2010): 103–130.
- Filiz-Ozbay, E., Uler, N. "Demand for giving to multiple charities: An experimental study" Journal of the European Economic Association 17:3 (2019): 725–753.
- Garrett, T., Rhine, R. "Government growth and private contributions to charity" Public Choice 143:1–2 (2010): 103–120.
- Glazer, A., Konrad, K. A. "A signaling explanation for charity" American Economic Review 86:4 (1996): 1019–1028.
- Gronberg, T. J., Luccasen, A. R., Turocy, T. L., Van Huyck, J. B. "Are tax-financed contributions to a public good completely crowded-out? Experimental evidence" Journal of Public Economics 96:7 (2012): 596–603.
- Gruber, J., Hungerman, D. M. "Faith-based charity and crowd-out during the great depression" Journal of Public Economics 91:5 (2007): 1043–1069.
- Kessler, J. B. "Announcements of support and public good provision" American Economic Review 107:12 (2017): 3760–3787.
- Khanna, J., Sandler, T. "Partners in giving: The crowding-in effects of UK government grants" European Economic Review 44:8 (2000): 1543–1556.
- Kellner, C., Reinstein, D., Riener, G. "Ex-ante commitments to ‘give if you win’ exceed donations after a win" Journal of Public Economics 169 (2019): 109–127.
- Heutel, G. "Crowding out and crowding in of private donations and government grants" Public Finance Review 42:2 (2012): 143–175.
- Payne, A. A. "Measuring the effect of federal research funding on private donations at research universities: Is federal research funding more than a substitute for private donations?" International Tax and Public Finance 8:5–6 (2001): 731–751.
- Ribar, D., Wilhelm, M. "Altruistic and joy-of-giving motivations in charitable behavior" Journal of Political Economy 110:2 (2002): 425–457.
- Schokkaert, E. "The empirical analysis of transfer motives" In: Kolm, S. -C., Ythier, J. M. (eds). Handbook of the Economics of Giving, Altruism and Reciprocity. Volume 1. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2006.
- Simmons, W. O., Emanuele, R. "Does government spending crowd out donations of time and money?" Public Finance Review 32:5 (2004): 498–511.
- Stadelmann Steffen, I. "Social volunteering in welfare states: Where crowding out should occur" Political Studies 59:1 (2011): 135–155.
- van Ingen, E., van der Meer, T. "Welfare state expenditure and inequalities in voluntary association participation" Journal of European Social Policy 21:4 (2011): 302–322.
- van Oorschoot, W., Arts, W. "The social capital of European welfare states: The crowding out hypothesis revisited" Journal of European Social Policy 15:1 (2005): 5–26.
- Warr, P. "Pareto optimal redistribution and private charity" Journal of Public Economics 19:1 (1982): 131–138.