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Working
Paper Series:
09.04
The President and the Distribution of Federal Spending
Christopher R. Berry, Barry C. Burden, and William G. Howell
http://www.harrisschool.uchicago.edu/faculty/web-pages/christopher-berry.asp
Abstract:
Empirical research on distributive politics emphasizes party and committee leaders in
Congress. This paper highlights the president, who most credibly fills the role of the proposer in
Baron and Ferejohn’s (1989) seminal model, and who has further opportunities to influence the
distribution of federal outlays both later in the appropriations process and after a final bill is
enacted. We analyze a large database that tracks the geographic spending of nearly every
domestic program over a 21-year period. Using a district fixed-effects estimation strategy, we
find only sporadic evidence that committee chairs, party leaders, and majority party members
receive larger shares of federal outlays. Instead, we find consistent and robust evidence that
districts receive systematically more spending when they are represented by legislators in the
president’s party.
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