Regional policy variation in Germany: the diversity of living conditions in a ‘unitary federal state’

Author (Person)
Series Title
Series Details Vol.21, No.9, October 2014, p1350-1366
Publication Date October 2014
ISSN 1350-1763
Content Type

Abstract:

The German federal system is conventionally understood as highly co-ordinated between federal and regional governments and aimed at producing a ‘uniformity’ of living conditions. This view has increasingly been challenged as new work focuses on innovation and diversity at the regional level, and also as a consequence of reforms to the federal system that took place in 2006. This contribution attempts to establish a more systematic basis for assessing and explaining the scope and significance of regional policy variation in Germany.

Our findings suggest that – despite institutional structures that foster intense co-ordination between central and regional governments and apparent popular preferences for uniformity of policy outcomes – the extent of policy variation in Germany is much greater than conventionally understood and driven both by structural factors and partisan choices at the regional level.

Source Link http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/
Subject Categories
Countries / Regions