Managing the Fiscal Metropolis: The Financial Policies, Practices, and
Health of Suburban Municipalities is an important book. This first
comprehensive analysis of the financial condition, management, and
policy making of local governments in a metropolitan region offers local
governments currently dealing with the Great Recession a better
understanding of what affects them financially and how to operate with
less revenue.
Hendrick's groundbreaking study covers 264 Chicago suburban
municipalities from the late 1990s to the present. In it she identifies
and describes the primary factors and events that affect municipal
financial decisions and financial conditions, explores the strategies
these governments use to manage financial conditions and solve financial
problems, and looks at the impact of contextual factors and stresses on
government financial decisions. Managing the Fiscal Metropolis offers
new evidence about the role of contextual factors-- including other
local governments--in the financial condition of municipalities and how
municipal financial decisions and practices alter these effects. The
wide economic and social diversity of the municipalities studied make
its findings relevant on a national scale.