Local government spending and services are more immediate and visible to most residents than state spending. In a typical day, we'll use local water, flush it into the local sewer, run a toaster with city electricity, drive on a public street to work, drop off the children at a local public school, and come home to a house built according to local building codes.
Oklahoma's local governments spent over $12 billion on public services in 2008, about $3 billion less than the state government. Local government spending is highly concentrated in education. Local governments spend far less than the state on health and social services and insurance trusts but considerably more on environment and housing and on utilities.There are many differences between state and local spending and services.
Local governments vary tremendously in geography (from a few blocks to a thousand or more square miles), in complexity (from zero to 5,000 full-time employees), in cost (from a few thousand to hundreds of millions of dollars in annual spending), and in scope (from offering only water service to providing government services from police to streets to code enforcement to arenas).
Go to Local Government Revenues