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Public Finance Review
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Article

Racial Context and Voting over Taxes: Evidence from a Referendum in Alabama

Christine H. Roch1 and Michael Rushton2*

1 Georgia State University
2 Indiana University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mirushto{at}indiana.edu.


   Abstract
The authors investigate the impact of racial diversity and segregation on white voter support for a comprehensive, progressive tax reform, focusing on a 2003 referendum held in Alabama, which if approved would have raised substantial additional revenues for public education and at the same time greatly increased the progressivity of the tax system. The authors use King’s method of ecological inference to obtain estimates of white and black support for the referendum proposal and then attempt to explain the variance across counties in white voter support. Findings show that the degree of racial segregation, rather than the proportion of blacks in a given county, is most critical in predicting support for the referendum among whites at the county level.

First published on February 15, 2008, doi:10.1177/1091142107313826

Public Finance Review 2008;36:614.

A more recent version of this article appeared on September 1, 2008


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