Description
Cengage Learning Australia Public Finance In Theory & Practice by Holley H. Ulbrich
Public Finance in Theory and Practice will provide students with an understanding of the economic role of government. The students will be provided with the tools to critically analyze problems/issues of the public sector using basic economic theory. The author takes a strong emphasis on policy analysis as a way to integrate theory. Integrated throughout the text is an international comparative perspective, allowing students to gain an understanding on various ways to organize government, create policies, collect revenue, and allocate funds. Unlike most public finance text in the market today, Ulbrich's voice represents a public choice approach. About Holley H. Ulbrich:
Holley Hewitt Ulbrich is Alumni Professor of Economics Emerita at Clemson University. She is a senior fellow at both the Strom Thurmond Institute and the Center for Governance at the University of South Carolina. She holds BA, MA and PhD degrees in economics from the University of Connecticut and served on the Clemson faculty from 1967 to 1997. The author of five books and well-known as a consultant to state and local government agencies, including the General Assembly, she has had a considerable amount of experience in taxation at the local, state, national, and even international level, having taught short courses in taxation and public finance at the World Bank for five years. Dr. Ulbrich worked as a policy analyst for the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations during a sabbatical in 1984-85 where she wrote a widely cited analysis of the taxation of interstate mail order sales. She is also the author of two USACIR monographs on local taxes, one on local sales taxes and one on local income taxes. Dr. Ulbrich and a number of colleagues were asked to develop recommendations for alternative local revenue sources in South Carolina in the late 1970s that ultimately resulted in the legislation for the accommodations tax in 1984 and the local option sales tax in 1990. In 1991 she was the principal author of a comprehensive study of the South Carolina tax system for the South Carolina ACIR. In 1997, she and three colleagues completed a widely discussed research report that analyzed projected state revenues and expenditures for South Carolina through 2010. She is one of the principal authors of the recent report to the Local Government Funding Steering Committee to improve funding for cities, counties and school districts in SC. She is also currently completing a new textbook in Public Finance for International Thomson Publishers, which is due out in March 2002.