Who and what a government taxes, and how the government spends the money
collected, are questions of primary concern to governments large and
small, national and local. When public revenues pay for high-quality
infrastructure and social services, citizens thrive and crises are
averted. When public revenues are inadequate to provide those goods,
inequality thrives and communities can verge into unrest--as evidenced
by the riots during Greece's financial meltdown and by the needless loss
of life in Haiti's collapse in the wake of the earthquake.
In The Public Good and the Brazilian State, Anne G. Hanley assembles
an economic history of public revenues as they developed in
nineteenth-century Brazil. Specifically, Hanley investigates the
financial life of the municipality--a district comparable to the county
in the United States--to understand how the local state organized and
prioritized the provision of public services, what revenues paid for
those services, and what happened when the revenues collected failed to
satisfy local needs. Through detailed analyses of municipal ordinances,
mayoral reports, citizen complaints, and financial documents, Hanley
sheds light on the evolution of public finance and its effect on the
early economic development of Brazilian society. This deeply researched
book offers valuable insights for anyone seeking to better understand
how municipal finance informs histories of inequality and
underdevelopment.