Title: 8th Lecture, STV4346B: Political economic topics I
18th Lecture, STV4346B Political economic
topics I
- Carl Henrik Knutsen, Department of Political
Science, UiO - 4/12-2008
2Some introductory comments
- We have now gone through parts I and II of the
course which focused on theoretical and
methodological issues (I) and some very general
political economic topics (II). In the third
part, we will discuss some selected, more focused
topics. - To better illustrate the topics, and to enhance
empirical knowledge, the different topical
lectures will draw on experiences from within
specified regions of the world. This does not
mean that the topics are only relevant for the
particular region with which it is presented, but
the issues might be extra salient in these
regions.
3Western Europe and North America
- The richest regions of the world, capitalist
systems - The most democratic regions of the world
- Implication developed economy and capitalist
production system, as well as a democratic polity
as underlying assumptions of studies - The more assumptions we can make, the more
focused our study will be, and the more specific
the analysis and its results. - Topics of the day A) Varieties of capitalism, B)
The economic effects of labor market structures
and color of government, C) Economic voting
4Varieties of Capitalism
- Hall and Soskice Ch 1, only pages 1-51
- Several forms of capitalism. Different countries
have different economic institutions, different
business-firm relations and different structures
of firms - Differences in institutional framework?
Differences in corporate strategy (rational
response depends on context) - Institutional complementarity The
functioning/efficiency of one particular
institutional structure in one area depends on
the structure of institutions in other areas.
Implications - Institutions tend to come in packages
- Institutional reform in one are alone is
difficult - No single best practice in one area of the
economy, independent of context
5Hall and Soskice contd
- Focus is on variation in national political
economies among advanced capitalist nations - But Bringing the firm back in. The importance
of firm structures and relations between firms
and other actors - Strategic interaction as a central concept. How
do economic actors solve coordination problems?
(Markets vs coordination) - The role of institutions in reducing uncertainty
and allowing for credible commitments - 1) How do firms exchange information?
- 2) How are firms monitored?
- 3) How are firms sanctioned when deviating from
cooperation? - 4) How do institutions provide opportunities for
deliberation among firms? - The importance of informal rules, history and
culture - Multiple equilibria. How do we arrive at one
particular? - Contingencies and incomplete contracts trust,
norms and common culture as the glue that makes
cooperation possible
6The basic ideal models Coordinated and Liberal
market economies
7Some examples of institutional complementarities
- Education and industrial organization
- Long term labor contracts and investment in
specific skills only when firm is relatively
certain that the worker will stay, is it
profitable to invest in specific skills, and when
firm has invested in specific skills, profitable
to keep existing labor - Financial system and labor protection
- Bank loans with long time horizon enable firms to
keep workers in recessions, less possible if uses
stock market (capital access depends on short
term balance sheets). If flexible labor markets,
flexible capital markets might work better since
resources distributed to firms that are doing
well, and new firms. - See pages 28 and 32 for the whole list of
possible complementarities - A more general (but less convincing) theoretical
argument - Majoritarian democracy goes better together with
a liberal market economy and consensual democracy
with coordinated market economy. - Strong government under majoritarianism? producer
groups cannot enter into cooperative schemes with
government. - Dominant governments and the problems of
investing in specific assets (which are crucial
in coordinated economies, think specialization
human capital for instance)
8Some points..
- Coordinated vs liberal as two poles on a
dimension... Continuous spectrum - Different types of coordination sectoral as in
Germany vs large cross-sectoral conglomerates as
in Japan - Solving the coordination problem markets, prices
and contracts vs negotiation, deliberation,
repeated trade and reputation - Social policy and type of economy Coordinated
economies with specific human capital and
inflexible labor markets need for social
insurance since it is very costly to lose job.
Business role in constructing social policy - Comparative institutional advantage in terms of
production sector and type of innovation - Liberal economies better at radical innovation
(decentralization, lower barriers to entry,
flexible capital). Sectors argued to be fitting
biotechnology, ITC.. - Coordinated economies better at incremental
innovation (longer time horizons, stability,
specialized labor, networks and learning).
Sectors argued to be fitting mechanical
engineering, consumer durables
9Some criticisms..
- What is theory, what is description and what is
evidence? - Observe Germany and US? construct theoretical
model? argue that the model is valid on the basis
of evidence from Germany and US - If case is not fitting, like Japan, create new
category (vertical coordination) - How do we know when we are wrong?
- Some claims seem to be made to fit the model It
is for example not obvious why all the industries
mentioned are either suited for radical or
incremental innovation (Where would you place the
movie industry? Why is aircraft manufacturing so
different from transport?) - Bottom line This is as HS themselves recognize
the start of a larger research project, and the
criticisms are therefore a bit unfair. However,
important to read claims critically, and know
that we are dealing with an idealized model
blended with empirical description.
10Politics and economic growth (Scruggs)
- How do labor market structures and color of
government affect economic growth? - The orthodox economic argument decentralized
labor markets and small states better for growth - The heterodox argument a positive role for
government and strong labor unions in
facilitating growth - An everlasting political debate and many
classical theoretical arguments, but what do the
data tell us? - Favorite quote by Stephen Colbert I am not
constrained by the data. I can believe whatever I
want!
11Unions, wages and inflation
- From macroeconomics excessive wage demands
result in inflation, which (perhaps) hurts other
aspects of the economy - Labor unions wage demands
- In this PD game, the equilibrium is High wage,
High wage, but the unions would have been better
off (Pareto-improvement) coordinating at low
wage, low, wage - The hump-shape thesis
- Countries with large, encompassing unions that
internalize the externalities related to
excessive wage demands will have low
inflation/good performance. - Countries with weak unions will also have low
inflation due to little bargaining power. - Countries with medium-sized unions (sectorally
divided for example) will have high inflation
12The interaction argument
- Congruent regimes have higher growth/better
performance than incongruent regimes - leftstrong unions rightweak unions
leftweak rightstrong - The benefits of leftstrong social/class
compromise - Only under system with social insurance and
extensive public goods will strong labor unions
say goodbye to militancy and accept restraints on
wage demands - Earlier empirical studies strong interaction
effect between color of government and strength
of unions. Leftstrong found to do equally well
as or better than rightweak. Both are better
than incongruent regimes.
13Empirical evidence, 74-84
14Empirical evidence, 85-95
15Scruggs results
- Finds evidence of interaction effect
- However, leftstrong does equally well as
rightweak from mid-70s to mid-80s, and performs
worse in the following decade - Time and the structure of the economic
environment Do Liberal economies do better than
Social democrat/ coordinated economies in the new
global economic environment (globalization with
fluid capital, rapid technological change in
decentralized information sector etc.) ? - Growth accounting indicates that even though
leftstrong are not equally good as rightweak at
technological change, they are better at capital
accumulation and increasing employment
16Some methodological critiques of the study
- Strange arguments for not using panel data
evidence, uses cross-section ?low n - Separation into decades Are decades long enough
to claim systematic evidence on differences in
growth rates? - Did Liberal economies increase their growth rates
in 85-95, partly because of the poor performance
in previous years? - What about business cycles when using short time
periods It makes a difference if a country
begins the decade at the top of the business
cycle and ends at the bottom. - In any case better to use PCSTS over the whole
time period and test for structural breaks
(Chow-test).
17Economic voting (Powell and Whitten)
- Do voters vote with their pocket books?
- Alternative explanations and complementarity
- Other factors also affect voting patterns social
cleavages and voting. - But some voters are susceptible to vote for
different parties on the basis of economic
performance. Economic swing voters. - Earlier studies and a puzzle
- Within-nation studies show that economic
performance affect voting patterns - Few robust findings from cross-national studies
- The crudeness of aggregate tests a need for
specifications. - Variables of interest Unemployment, inflation
and economic growth
18Important considerations
- Regressing (votest votest-1) on economic
performance is a too crude investigation of the
hypothesis that voters react to economic
performance - 1) If government had a good election result in
t-1 (it won power!), there might be a natural
adjustment in t, independent of performance. It
looks as if governments performing well do not
gain votes, but they actually do when compared to
the real baseline (t-1 overestimates baseline) - Additional point gaining 2 of the electorate is
more difficult if you already have 98 of the
electorate than if you have 50 ? control for
size in t-1 - 2) Performance might be evaluated by voters in
terms of how well other countries are doing? No
absolute measuring rods. 3 inflation was a
larger accomplishment in the 1970s than in the
1950s (or late 90s)
19Important considerations contd
- 3) Left-wing governments might depend more on
performance related to unemployment and right
wing government on inflation. What do the core
constituencies care about? Remember that
disgruntled voters can choose not to vote! - 4) The policy context The effects predicted to
be larger in countries that have political
systems that clarify responsibility for economic
performance and thus generate political
accountability - Note Link this argument back to Przeworskis
argument on the effects of political
accountability and retrospective voting on
incentives for politicians
20Elaborations
- Baseline model (replication of earlier study by
Paldam) which does not incorporate considerations
1-4, does generally not find significant results
for economic performance - Additional point not mentioned in study The
problem of multi-colinearity Especially GDP per
capita and unemployment are highly correlated?
Difficult to find significant effects. - Remedy for point 1 control for vote swing from
t-2 to t-1 - Remedy for point 2 use relative performance as
independent variables (relative to performance in
other industrialized countries at time t, pooled
cross section time series approach employed). - Remedy for point 3 Differentiate between right
and left wing governments in the analysis
21The political context, remedies for point 4
- Which governments are characterized by (more)
clarity of responsibility for economic outcomes?
(relate to Persson and Tabellinis paper..) - General answer those governments that are
perceived to have more unified control over
policy making - Incentives for politicians to blur lines of
responsibility, share blame etc in bad times - Specific structures that reduce clarity of
responsibility - Lack of voting cohesion in government party or
parties weak, undisciplined political parties - Participatory and inclusive committee system in
legislature, especially when committees are
strong - Bicameral opposition (lack of majority in second
chamber) - Minority government
- Coalition governments
22Remedies for point 4 contd
- Constructs additive index ranging from 0 (New
Zealand) to 5 (Switzerland), where high value
implies less clear responsibility, and divides
countries in analysis - Electoral rules and accountability PR and the
increased chance of coalition government?
prediction less economic voting - Lijpharts Consensual Democracies less clarity
of responsibility because of various factors?
prediction less economic voting
23Empirical results
24Empirical conclusions
- Economic voting significant only in countries
with clear political responsibility - In systems with clear responsibility
- High relative GDP per capita growth positively
affects votes for incumbents - High relative unemployment negatively affect
votes of left-wing incumbents - High relative inflation negatively affects votes
for right-wing incumbents