Political entry, public policies, and the economy
Political entry, public policies, and the economy
Rate this book:
About This Book
"This paper presents a theory of competition for political leadership between incumbent leaders and their challengers in which the possible equilibrium political market structures range from pure monopoly (unchallenged dictatorship) to perfectly competitive (ideal democracy). Leaders are constrained by the threat of "entry" or their ability to tax (or both), so that regimes with no challengers may nonetheless implement policies in the public interest. We offer economic interpretations of why democratic countries are associated with higher wages, why resource abundant countries tend to be nondemocratic, and how technological change affects political development. By focusing on the incentives for political entry, we show how trade sanctions and other policies designed to promote democracy may actually have the unintended consequences of discouraging political competition"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Casey B. Mulligan
A century of labor-leisure dis
A century of labor-leisure distortions
A dual method of empirically e
A dual method of empirically evaluating dynamic competitive equilibrium models with market distortions, applied to the Great Depression and World War II
A labor-income-based measure o
A labor-income-based measure of the value of human capital
A labour-income-based measure
A labour-income-based measure of the value of human capital
Adoption of financial technolo
Adoption of financial technologies
Aggregate implications of indi
Aggregate implications of indivisible labor