Faith-based charity and crowd out during the Great Depressio
Faith-based charity and crowd out during the Great Depression
12 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Interest in religious organizations as providers of social services has increased dramatically in recent years. Churches in the U.S. were a crucial provider of social services through the early part of the twentieth century, but their role shrank dramatically with the expansion in government spending under the New Deal. In this paper, we investigate the extent to which the New Deal crowded out church charitable spending in the 1930s. We do so using a new nationwide data set of charitable spending for six large Christian denominations, matched to data on local New Deal spending. We instrument for New Deal spending using measures of the political strength of a state's congressional delegation, and confirm our findings using a different instrument based on institutional constraints on state relief spending. With both instruments we find that higher government spending leads to lower church charitable activity. Crowd-out was small as a share of total New Deal spending (3%), but large as a share of church spending: our estimates suggest that church spending fell by 30% in response to the New Deal, and that government relief spending can explain virtually all of the decline in charitable church activity observed between 1933 and 1939"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Jonathan Gruber
A tax-based estimate of the el
A tax-based estimate of the elasticity of intertemporal substitution
A theory of government regulat
A theory of government regulation of addictive bads
Abortion legalization and chil
Abortion legalization and child living circumstances
An international perspective o
An international perspective on policies for an aging society
Cash welfare as a consumption
Cash welfare as a consumption smoothing mechanism for single mothers
Covering the uninsured in the
Covering the uninsured in the U.S