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Linguistic competition and education spending in Spain 1992–2008
Authors:Amy H Liu  Andrew B Kirkpatrick  Donald M Beaudette
Institution:1. University of Colorado at Boulder, USA;2. Christopher Newport University, USA;3. Morehouse College, USA
Abstract:Linguistic competition occurs when two or more linguistic groups vie against each other for resources from the same state. What are the effects of this competition on education spending? In this paper, we examine two competing explanations. On the one hand, there is the claim that increasing levels of ethno-linguistic diversity can decrease education spending. On the other hand, there is also the argument that education spending is higher when there is electoral competition. Using a newly assembled dataset of education spending at the subnational level for Spain (1992–2008), we test these two arguments. We find (1) while ethno-linguistic diversity matters for spending, the effect is not in the expected direction and (2) electoral competition can affect education spending. We also find that the type of education curriculum (monolingual versus bilingual) can moderate the effects of ethno-linguistic diversity. These results shed light on the commonly held belief that diversity stunts education spending.
Keywords:Ethnic politics  Party politics  Spain
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