Title: Self-Control in Peer Groups
1Building Public Infrastructure in a
Representative Democracy
Marco Battaglini Princeton University and
CEPR Salvatore Nunnari Caltech Thomas
Palfrey Caltech
2Public Infrastructure
- New dynamic approach to the political economy of
public investment - Many public goods are durable and cannot be
produced overnight. Call this Public
Infrastructure - Examples
- Transportation networks
- Defense infrastructure
- Three key features of public infrastructure
- Public good
- Durability current investment has lasting value
- Dynamics takes time to build
3Government and Public Infrastructure
- A major function of governments is the
development and maintenance of lasting public
goods. - How do political institutions affect provision?
- Federalist systems Decentralized
- Provinces, States, Counties, etc.
- Centralized/Representative Legislatures and
Parliaments
4Theoretical Approach
- Simple infinite horizon model of building public
infrastructure. Similar to capital accumulation
models - Characterize the planners (optimal) solution as
benchmark - Compare Institutions for making these decisions
- Two models
- Centralized (Representative Legislature)
- Legislative bargaining model
- Decentralized (Autarky)
- Simultaneous independent decision making at
district level
5Empirical Approach
- Laboratory Experiments
- Control the driving parameters (environment) of
model - Preferences, Technology, Endowments
- Mechanism Rules of the game
- Incentivize behavior with money
- Theory gives us predictions
- Equilibrium behavior and Time paths of investment
- Differences across mechanisms and environments
- Experiments give us data
- Compare theory and data
6The Model
- n districts, i1,,n each of equal size
- Infinite horizon. Discrete time
- Two goods
- Private good x
- Public good g (durable). Initial level g0
- Public policy in period t zt(xt,gt) where
xt(xt1,,xtn) - Each district endowment in each period ?tiW/n
- Societal endowment W
- Endowment can be consumed (xt ) or invested (It)
- Public good technology. Depreciation rate d
7The Model
Feasibility
Budget balance
Can rewrite Budget balance as
Preferences
u () lt 0 u() gt 0 u(0) 8 u(8) 0
8Planners Problem (optimum)
Denote value function vp(.) aggregate
consumption XSxi
Notice y0 constraint not binding because of
Inada conditions Hence rewrite optimization
problem as
9Optimal Policy
- Denote optimal policy by y(g). Optimal steady
state yp - Three phases
- Rapid growth It W
- Maintenance of steady state 0 lt It lt W
- Decline It 0
- Depends on whether nonnegativity constraint on
consumption is binding
10Optimal Path
- Case 1 Constraint binding Rapid growth
- I W
- yt W (1-d)gt-1
- Case 2 Constraint not binding. Steady state y
W (1-d)gt-1 - Solves nu(y) v(y) 1
- Corresponds to two phases
- Maintenance of steady state 0 lt It lt W
- Decline It 0
11Optimal Path
- Switch from growth to maintenance phase at gp
12Optimal Path
13Optimal Path
Summary of optimal policy
14Planners solution 1
y(g)
yp
1-d
W
gp
gp/(1-d)
g
15Planners solution 2
y(g)
yp
W
gp
gp/(1-d)
g
16Optimal Path Example
u(y) ya/ a
17The Legislative Mechanism
- Legislature decides policy in each period
- Non-negative transfers, x1,,xn
- Level of public good y (1-d)g W Sxi
- Random recognition rule
- Proposer offers proposal (x,y)
- Committee votes using qualified majority rule (q)
- If proposal fails, then y 0, xi ?i W/n for
all i
18The Legislative Mechanism
- Proposers Maximization Problem
Note (1) Proposal is (x,s,y) (2) s is
the private allocation offered to each of the
(q-1) other members of the coalition.
(3) x is the private allocation to the proposer
(4) First constraint is IC Other members
of the coalition are willing to vote for the
proposal. (5) v() is the value function
for continuing next period at state y.
19The Legislative Mechanism
- Proposers Maximization Problem
Several cases, depending on state, gyt-1, and
on whether IC is binding.
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21In the other case, we have W-y(g)(1-d)g0, i.e.,
x(g)0. This occurs when g lt g1(y1)
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23IC Binding s gt 0 CASE
24IC Binding s 0 CASE
25LEGISLATIVE MECHANISM INVESTMENT FUNCTION
Note Investment function is not monotonically
decreasing! Investment is increasing in third
region g2 lt g lt g3
26Legislative Mechanism 1
y2
y1
1
45o
g1
g3
g2
y2/(1-d)
27Legislative Mechanism 1
qgtq
y2
y1
1
g1
g3
g2
y2/(1-d)
28Legislative Mechanism 2
y2
y1
1
45o
g1
g3
g2
y2/(1-d)
29Legislative Mechanism 3
y2
y1
1
45o
g1
g3
g2
y2/(1-d)
30LEGISLATIVE MECHANISM VALUE FUNCTION
Note Value function is monotonically
increasing! Investment is increasing in third
region g2 lt g lt g3
31LEGISLATIVE MECHANISM VALUE FUNCTION
Relationship between v and (y1,y2)
32Illustration of Legislative Bargaining Equilibrium
33COMPUTING THE EQUILIBRIUM
Exploit the relationship between v and (y1,y2)
34The Autarky Mechanism
- In each period, each district simultaneously
decides its own policy for how to divide ?i
W/n between private consumption and public good
investment. - District can disinvest up to 1/n share of g
- Symmetric Markov perfect equilibrium
35The Autarky Mechanism
- Districts Maximization Problem
A symmetric equilibrium is a district-consumption
function x(g)
For each g, a district chooses the
district-optimal feasible xi taking as given that
other districts current decision is given by
x(g), and assuming that all districts future
decisions in the future are given by x(g)
36The Autarky Mechanism
37The Autarky Mechanism
38The Autarky Mechanism
Example with power utility function u Bya/a
Typo Exponent Should be 1/(1-a)
In planners solution, the denominator equals
1-(1-d)d
39Autarky Mechanism
yv
1-d
1
gV
40- Summary of theory and possible extensions
- New Approach to the Political Economy of Public
Investment. - Applies equally as a model of capital
accumulation - Centralized representative system much better
than decentralized - Still significant inefficiencies with majority
rule - Higher q leads to greater efficiency
theoretically - Why not qn?
- Model can be extended to other political
institutions - Elections
- Regional aggregation (subnational)
- Different legislative institutions (parties,
etc.) - Model can be extended to allow for more complex
economic institutions - Debt and taxation, Multiple projects,
Heterogeneity
41Experimental Design
42Experimental Design
43Experiment Implementation
- Discount factor implemented by random stopping
rule. (prcontinue.75) - Game durations from 1 period to 13 periods in our
data - Multiple committees simultaneously processed (5x3
and 3x4) - Payoffs rescaled to allow fractional decisions
- Caltech subjects. Experiments conducted at SSEL
- Multistage game software package
- 10 matches in each session
- Subjects paid the sum of earnings in all periods
of all matches - Total earnings ranged from 20 to 50
- Sessions lasted between 1 and 2 hours
44Sample ScreensLegislative Mechanism
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49Sample ScreensAutarky Mechanism
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53RESULTS
54L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 1
55L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 2
56L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 3
57L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 4
58L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 5
59L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 6
60L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. ALL PERIODS
61A5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 1
62A5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 2
63A5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 3
64A5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 4
65A5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 5
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67A3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 1
68A3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 2
69A3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 3
70A3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 4
71A3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 5
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73L3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 1
74L3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 2
75L3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 3
76L3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 4
77L3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 5
78L3 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. PERIOD 6
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80Median Time Paths
81Autarky Median Time Paths
825 person committeesLegislative vs. Autarky
833 person committeesLegislative vs. Autarky
84Legislative Median Time Paths
85Median Time Paths of g
86Investment Paths(includes conditional and failed
proposals)
87Investment function for L3
88Investment function for L5
89Investment function for A3
90Investment function for A5
91Investment Pathsas a function of the State
92Investment function L3
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96L5 ALL COMMITTEE PATHS. ALL PERIODS
97Voting Behavior
98L5 PROPOSAL ACCEPTANCE RATES
- InvW is common
- Pork to all is common with investment
- MWC most common with no investment
- Rejection declines over first six rounds
- Negative investment only with high g
- Types commonly rejected
- Pork only to proposer
- Negative investment
- Even with pork to all
99L3 PROPOSAL ACCEPTANCE RATES
low
low
low
- InvW is common
- Pork to all is common (often token)
- MWC less common
- Rejection declines over first six rounds
- Negative investment only with high g
- Types commonly rejected
- Pork only to proposer
- Negative investment
- Even with pork to all
low
100VOTING BEHAVIOR ACCEPTANCE RATES
101VOTING BEHAVIOR ACCEPTANCE RATES Test for
stationary behavior
102PROPOSAL BEHAVIOR PORK TO PREVIOUS PROPOSER Test
for stationary behavior
PUNISHMENT AND REWARD
103- Summary
- New Approach to Political Economy of Public
Investment. - Centralized system theoretically better than
decentralized - Important role for centralized representative
government - Still, significant inefficiencies with majority
rule - Higher q leads to greater efficiency
theoretically - Laboratory trajectories of public good close to
theoretical model - Centralized representative voting mechanism leads
to big efficiency gains - Suggests value of applying framework to a much
wider variety of institutions and environments. - Role of repeated game effects non-Markov
behavior - Statistically significant. Affects a few
committees (higher investment) - Economically significant? Not much. Small in
these experiments
104Investment function L5
Some outliers excluded