Sousa, Rossana Guerra dePaulo, EdilsonMaroco, João2017-03-062017-03-062017Social Indicators Research, 1-18. Doi: 10.1007/s11205-016-1459-20303-8300http://hdl.handle.net/10400.12/5306The way public policies are managed in Brazil has changed since the 1988 Federal Constitution. This study aimed to identify how changes in the structure of public expenditure composition at Brazilian federal states influenced local human development in these states. The states’ public expenditures were categorized according to their nature as spending indices whereas human development was measured through a human development index (HD). To verify the relationships between these variables, an accounting-social theoretical model was created and estimated through latent growth modeling (LGM). The LGM measurement period comprised five administration cycles of the Brazilian states (1988–2011). Variables were measured on data of the second year of state government term; their mean initial values and growth rates were recorded. Results show that, influenced by policies of centralized regulation promoted by the federal government, only the social spending growth rates had statistically significant effect on the human development growth rate, although not considered of great magnitude. Among mean initial values, the most significant was that of minimum spending (SIm), which denotes the direct impact of the Fiscal Accountability Law [Lei de Responsabilidade Fiscal, in Portuguese] on human evelopment improvements. The mean initial value of economic spending also showed a positive and significant effect on HD growth rate.engPublic expenditureHuman developmentPublic policiesLongitudinal factor analysis of public expenditure composition and human development in Brazil after the 1988 constitutionjournal article10.1007/s11205-016-1459-2