Determinants of states' allocations of the master settlement agreement payments.
To determine which factors influence states' allocation decisions for the tobacco Master Settlement Agreement and the four individual settlements' annual payments, including the decision to securitize, we analyzed the effects of voter characteristics, political parties, interest groups, prior spending on public tobacco control programs, and state fiscal health on per capita settlement funds allocated to tobacco-control, health, and other programs. Tobacco-producing states and those with high proportions of conservative Democrats or elderly, black, Hispanic, or wealthy people tended to spend less on tobacco control. Education and medical lobbies had strong positive influences on per capita allocations for tobacco-control and health-related programs. State fiscal crises affected amounts spent by states from settlement funds as well as the probability of securitizing future cash flows from the settlements.
Duke Scholars
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- United States
- Tobacco Industry
- State Government
- Resource Allocation
- Politics
- Health Promotion
- Health Policy & Services
- Decision Making
- Budgets
- 4408 Political science
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- United States
- Tobacco Industry
- State Government
- Resource Allocation
- Politics
- Health Promotion
- Health Policy & Services
- Decision Making
- Budgets
- 4408 Political science