Accountability and local control: Incentive response with and without authority over resource generation and allocation

Authors
Susanna Loeb,
Katharine O. Strunk
Year of publication
2007
Publication
Education Finance and Policy
Volume/Issue
2(1)
Pages
Oct-39
This article examines the interaction between school accountability and local control over revenue raising and resource allocation. In particular, it asks whether accountability policies are more or less effective at improving student outcomes in states with stronger local control. Local control is operationalized with multiple measures, including the percentage of education funding from categorical grants, state supreme court rulings overturning school finance systems, local entities' taxing authority, and principals' self-assessments of their ability to control school resources. Using the National Center for Education Statistics' Schools and Staffing Survey and National Assessment of Educational Progress, the article finds that accountability policies are more effective when there is greater local control.

Suggested Citation

Loeb, S., & Strunk, K.O. (2007). Accountability and local control: Incentive response with and without authority over resource generation and allocation. Education Finance and Policy, 2(1), Oct-39