Einführung: Strukturen der öffentlichen Verwaltung und Raumentwicklung – Allgemeine Zusammenhänge und Ansätze zu ihrer Erforschung im Überblick
Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Gebiets- und Verwaltungsstrukturen im Umbruch: Beiträge zur Reformdiskussion aus Erfahrungen in Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt und Thüringen,
No. 360,
2015
Abstract
Far-reaching measures of administrative restructuring are being often introduced in the face of demographic change and the financial diffculties of the municipalities and federal states. Only with larger entities, it is argued, will it in future be possible to provide high quality municipal services at a reasonable cost. The tendency to enlarge municipal entities fits with the overall picture of municipal reforms in Germany, which since 1945 have been dominated by measures associated with concentration and centralisation efforts. Territorial restructuring is, however, but one element of the entire spectrum of administrative reforms. Further elements of administrative (re)structuring are the reform of the portfolio of public tasks (critical review of public tasks), the transfer of responsibilities between the levels (functional reform), and a change in the specifications of financing regulations relevant to services assigned to the public sector (financing reform). This publication consists of the results of the working group “Administrative and Territorial Reforms” (AG VGR) of the state working groups Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt and Thüringen of the Akademie für Raumforschung und Landesplanung (ARL). A significant objective of the AG VGR was to shed more light on the spatially-related interactions of the effects of administrative reform measures, as there are few findings on the topic that are empirically well-founded and many questions remain unanswered.
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Kommunale Kooperation und Effizienz: Das Beispiel der hessischen Abwasserentsorgung
F. Blaeschke, Peter Haug
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 4,
2014
Abstract
Angesichts der teilweise prekären Finanzlage deutscher Kommunen gelten freiwillige Kooperationen im Kommunalbereich als mögliche Alternative, z. B. zu politisch heiklen Gebietsreformen, um Kostenersparnisse zu realisieren. Die Ergebnisse einer Effizienzstudie des IWH (in Kooperation mit der Universität Kassel) zeigen am Beispiel der hessischen kommunalen Abwasserentsorgung allerdings, dass sich nicht jede Form der kommunalen Zusammenarbeit bzw. Arbeitsteilung günstig auf die Effizienz der Leistungserstellung auswirken muss. Insbesondere die verbreitete Teilzweckverbandslösung schneidet hier eher ungünstig ab. Weitere Ergebnisse zeigen neben einem erheblichen Effizienzsteigerungspotenzial auch eine weitgehende Ausschöpfung von Größenvorteilen. Daneben bestätigt sich außerdem der erhebliche Einfluss demographischer und siedlungsstruktureller Faktoren für die effiziente Abwassersammlung und -behandlung.
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Gemeindegröße, Verwaltungsform und Effizienz der kommunalen Leistungserstellung – Das Beispiel Sachsen-Anhalt
Peter Haug
Raumforschung und Raumordnung,
No. 4,
2013
Abstract
Municipality Size, Institutions and Efficiency of Municipal Service Provision: The Case of Saxony-Anhalt: In this contribution we analyze the determinants of the efficiency of municipal service production using the example of the German state of Saxony-Anhalt. The focus lies on the effects of municipality size, institutional setting and spatial or demographic factors. We perform a robust non-parametric frontier estimation (Convex order-m).The results reveal e.g. no efficiency deficits of municipal associations and a significant impact of demographic factors and settlement structures.
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Re-Municipalizing instead of Privatization: The Right Answer to Changing Conditions?
Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Wirtschaftsdienst,
No. 2,
2013
Abstract
For explaining why local governments in Germany are presently thinking about re-municipalizing some services which had initially been privatized, a couple of years ago, several changing factors, in combination with given constraints at the local level (like the well-known deficiencies of the local revenue system), could be identified. But a closer look at the changing determinants makes clear that there are other – and often better – options to react than just re-municipalizing.
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Federal grants for local development to stop economic decline? – Lessons from Germany
Peter Haug, Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Consequences of the International Crisis for European SMEs – Vulnerability and resilience. Routledge Studies in the European Economy, Routledge,
2012
Abstract
The chapter analyses theoretically and empirically the supply-side effects of the public investments funded by the German „Economic Stimulus Package II“(Konjunkturpaket II), which was implemented in 2009. In the theoretical part, we address the distortionary effects of investment grants on public capital provision and local economic development. According to the theoretical literature on the efficient provision of public goods, public inputs and economic growth, conditional investment grants have several negative allocation effects: First, they distort the relative factor prices for the local government stimulating excess public capital stocks and Pareto-inefficient provision of public goods. Second, long-term growth-enhancing effects of debt-financed public investment could only be expected for public inputs, which either directly increase the productivity of the private sector or increase factor productivity, especially by increasing the stock of human capital. In the empirical part, we find that despite of the recent increase in municipal investments in the German state of Saxony our regression results do not confirm a connection with the ESPII funds. Furthermore, no relationship between the municipal fiscal strength and the amount of ESPII grants received could be found. All in all, due to the focus of the grants on public consumption goods rather than public inputs only marginal future growth effects can be expected from the subsidized investments.
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Editorial
Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 6,
2012
Abstract
Wie viel Geld brauchen die deutschen Städte und Gemeinden, um ihre Leistungsangebote zu finanzieren, und woher sollen die Mittel kommen? Es ist ja keineswegs zu leugnen: Die Finanzlage der Kommunen sieht derzeit vielfach trostlos aus. Teilweise rufen die kommunalen Spitzenverbände deshalb wieder einmal nach Bundeszuschüssen, so etwa für Infrastrukturinvestitionen. Aber war nicht gerade die Entflechtung der staatlichen Ebenen ein erklärtes Ziel der Föderalismusreform des Jahres 2006? Sollten dann vielleicht eher die (übrigens durchaus auch von Vertretern der Kommunen geäußerten) Vorschläge verfolgt werden, die kommunale Infrastruktur stärker als bisher mit Hilfe von Gebühren und Beiträgen – also nutzerbezogen – zu finanzieren?
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Size is not everything – The efficiency of municipal service provision in Saxony-Anhalt
Peter Haug, Annette Illy
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 10,
2011
Abstract
The proponents of municipal area reforms – e.g. the recently completed reform in Saxony-Anhalt – expect that municipal amalgamations or centralized organizational forms save costs or increase the efficiency of local public service provision. This article examines the potential efficiency deficits of Saxony-Anhalt´s fragmented municipal structures on the eve of the crucial phase of the municipal reform. The results of a two-step DEA bootstrap procedure show that decentralized municipalities (“Verwaltungsgemeinschaften”) do not have to be significantly less efficient than centralized municipalities (“Einheitsgemeinden”). Furthermore, the results of the scale efficiency analysis suggest that the majority of Saxony-Anhalt´s communities already had an approximately efficient “firm size” – if the aggregated level of the municipal associations is examined. The relationship between scale efficiency and population is U-shaped. On the one hand, the results do not support the preservation of micro-municipalities or the formation of municipal associations with more than ten members. On the other hand, the results provide also no evidence for the necessity to reduce the number of towns and municipalities in Saxony-Anhalt from 1118 in 2004 to currently 219 – even if the looming population decline is taken into account.
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Sharing Competences: The Impact of Local Institutional Settings on Voter Turnout
Claus Michelsen, Peter Bönisch, Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Abstract
Institutions are common predictors of voter turnout. Most research in this field focuses on cross-country comparisons of voting systems, like the impact of compulsory voting or registration systems. Fewer efforts have been devoted to understand the role of local institutions and their impact on political participation. Especially the impact of divided competences in relation to public good provision and its impact on voter turnout has been widely ignored. In the present paper, we analyze the effects of different institutional settings for inter-municipal cooperation on voter turnout. We use data from local elections in Germany, held in 2003 and 2004. Overall, we analyze aggregate voter turnout of 1661 municipalities and find strong evidence for our hypothesis that local institutional settings are influential in this context. Further, our results indicate that the better competences correspond to the spatial dimension of local public goods, the higher should be the voter turnout.
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Wer zahlt für das schöne Leben? Technische Infrastruktur in Zeiten von Bevölkerungsrückgang am Beispiel von drei ostdeutschen Mittelstädten
C. Deilmann, I. Kropp, Peter Haug
Tagungsband Arbeitskreis Stadterneuerung an deutschsprachigen Hochschulen,
2010
Abstract
In cities with decreasing population there is an increasing concern about the future cost of technical infrastructure. A diminishing number of inhabitants will have to bear the costs of the public services provided by their community. Beyond the pure cost arithmetic the main research question of our project was how urban planning can contribute to alleviating the rising average cost per service unit (cbm, sqm). The study was carried out for three medium-sized cities in the eastern part of Germany with a time horizon of 2030. The focus is on water, sewage and communal roads.
The rather surprising result was that urban planning (attempts for densification, inner city development instead of extensivation of the urban fabric) has little effect on long-term cost compared to the unavoidable yearly renovation requirements of the technical infrastructure. Because of the dominant block of fixed cost in technical infrastructure systems, the demographic development is the main cost determinant. Therefore, in future a massive problem in financing today’s standard of public services will be imminent.
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Welche Zukunft hat die kommunale Wohnungswirtschaft? – Ein Tagungsbericht
Peter Haug, K. Schmerler, Dominik Weiß, Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 3,
2010
Abstract
Das Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle (IWH) befasst sich alle zwei Jahre im Rahmen einer Tagung mit ausgewählten Aspekten der kommunalen Wirtschaft. Am 5. und 6. November 2009 fand das „Hallesche Kolloquium zur kommunalen Wirtschaft“ zum dritten Mal statt, und zwar zum Thema „Zur Zukunft der kommunalen Wohnungspolitik“. Über dieses Thema, speziell über die Bedeutung der kommunalen Wohnungswirtschaft für die Stadtentwicklung, wird nicht erst seit dem spektakulären Verkauf der Dresdner WOBA an ein privates Unternehmen kontrovers diskutiert. Ungeachtet solcher Veränderungen ist im Osten Deutschlands als Folge der Systemtransformation der Anteil kommunaler Anbieter am Wohnungsmarkt im Vergleich zum Westen sehr hoch, was in der wissenschaftlichen wie politischen Debatte unterschiedlich bewertet wird.
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