Title: Political Economy Chapter 4: Agency
1Political EconomyChapter 4Agency
Marcelo Tyszler Lorena Barberia Carol Fonseca
18/mar de 2005
2Outline
- Politicians pre-commit to policies before
elections - Efficient Electoral Competition
- Inefficient Electoral Competition (ex-post
discretion on implementation) - Politicians with difficulties in pre-commitment
- Enforceable, verifiable promises (e.g. Judiciary)
- Enforceable, non-verifiable promises
- Non-enforceable promises
- Politicians do not pre-commit to policies
(non-enforcement) - Electoral Accountability and re-election of
incumbents - Incumbents have power
- Asymmetric information
- Career Concerns and re-election of incumbents
- Two-period model
- Electoral cycles
3Agency Politicians versus Voters
- Principal-Agent Theory
- The person (the agent) whose job it is to act to
the benefit of someone else (the principal), but
who may require some incentive to do so. - E.g., agent is politician and the principal is
the voters
- Goal of chapter
- Explore to what how agency operates in
majoritarian, two-party elections for the
delivery of optimal government spending (based on
voters utility preferences) when candidates have
potential to extract endogenous rents. - We want how elections discipline candidates
(enforcement) in terms of guaranteeing spending
on government services and how voters limits on
information may influence the potential
disciplining force of competition.
4The Voters Problem
5The Voters Problem with Ideology
6The Candidates Problem
7Agency The Problem
84.1 Efficient Electoral CompetitionKey Variables
- q Policy
- g government spending
- tax rate
- r endogenous rents
- R exogenous ego-rents
- Wi(q) Indirect utility function
- H(g) increasing function part of indirect
utility function function of publicly provided
goods - transaction costs associated with rent
appropriation (exogenous) - m median voter
94.1 Efficient Electoral CompetitionAssumptions
- Income distribution is continuous
- Candidates have no ideological attributes and are
identical in all respects - Timing
- 1) Platforms are announced (g) level of govt
spending - 2) Elections are held between two parties or two
candidates. - 3) Winner implements platform (g).
104.1 Efficient Electoral Competition
- Chapter 3
- Median voter equilibrium (Condorcet winner)
- gm Hg-1(ym/y)
- All parties converge
- gm gA gB
- Political equilibrium median y
- Govt spending average y
- Chapter 4
- Median voter equilibrium still holds.
- gm Hg-1(ym/y)
- All parties converge
- gm gA gB
- rm rA rB 0
- RENTS ZERO
114.1 Efficient Electoral CompetitionImplications
- Equilibrium public goods are provided (gA gB).
- Size of government spending, g, is determined by
average income. - Political equilibrium (convergence to same
policy choice for g) is determined by median
income. - Political competition drives endogenous rents,
r, to zero.
124.1 Inefficient Electoral Competition Key
Variables
- J income groups
- siJ individual specific parameter (ideological
bias if gt0 ideological bias in favor of
candidate), uniformly distributed. - Densities summarize how responsive voters are to
policy, number of swing voters - average relative popularity of candidate,
uniformly distributed
134.2 Inefficient Electoral CompetitionAssumptions
- Income distribution is discrete among three
groups J. - Candidates have ideological attributes
- Voters have preferences on these attributes,
distribution of these preferences is identical,
number of swing voters is identical for all J - Timing
- 1) Platforms are announced (g) level of govt
spending - 2) The actual values of is realized.
- 3) Elections are held between two parties or two
candidates. - 4) Winner implements platform (g).
- Sources of inefficiency rent-seeking and
electoral competition in which ideology weakens
competition
14 4.2 Inefficient Electoral Competition
- Chapter 3
- Voter J is indifferent
- Probability Candidate A wins
- Equilibrium determined by swing voter
- Chapter 4
- Both candidates convergence to equilibrium
spending on public goods. - However, equilibrium rents are gt0
Because y y, gs g All groups get equal
weight, end result is to maximize average voters
utility. Convergence to equilibrium spending on
public goods.
154.2 Inefficient Electoral CompetitionImplication
s
- Equilibrium public goods are provided. (gA gB).
- Political equilibrium (PA PB ) is determined
by income . - Political competition does not necessarily drive
endogenous rents, r, to zero. - Greater endogenous rents
- Higher uncertainty of election outcome (marginal
decrease in probability of winning) - Lower exogenous value of holding office, R
- Lower transaction costs associated with rent
appropriation
164.3 Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Assumptions
- yi y all voters earn same income
-
- the cost of transforming private output
into public goods cost of public goods - Timing
- 1) Platforms are announced (g) level of govt
spending - 2) Elections are held between two parties or two
candidates. - 3) , cost of transforming public goods, is
realized. - 4) Winner implements platform (g).
- Sources of inefficiency rent-seeking and
electoral competition in which ideology weakens
competition candidates have ex-post discretion
on implementation
174.3.1 Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Implications if promises are
enforceable and verifiable ( e.g. Existence of
Judiciary)
- Voters prefer candidate that give them highest
utility. Probability of winning varies depending
on utility derived from A vs. B.
184.3.1 Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Implications if promises are
enforceable and verifiable ( e.g. Existence of
Judiciary)
- The two candidates or parties converge to same
equilibrium policy - Equilibrium supply of public goods varies with
cost of transformation from private to public.
The efficient supply of public goods is
decreasing in terms of cost of public good.
Higher cost, lower level of g.
194.3.1 Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Implications if promises are
enforceable and verifiable ( e.g. Existence of
Judiciary)
- Equilibrium rents
- Equilibrium level of taxes increases with cost
of transformation.
204.3.2 Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Assumptions if promises are
enforceable, but promises are not verifiable
- Assume either two states are possible
- low cost of public goods, lower taxes,
higher spending on g - high cost of public goods, higher taxes,
lower spending on g - Source of inefficiency Uncertainty and
Non-verifiability. Politicians have incentive to
claim high cost and benefit from rents they keep
( if reality low cost). However, if real state is
high cost, candidates must deliver goods and can
not capture rents for themselves. - Claim The best voters can hope for is policy in
expensive state (higher taxes!), but guaranteed
g.
214.3.2 Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Implications if promises are
enforceable, but promises are not verifiable
- Voters maximize their utility and prefer
outcome with higher cost of public goods and
guaranteed level of goods, - Taxes will be collected at high-level
224.3.2 Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Implications if promises are
enforceable, but promises are not verifiable
- However, equilibrium level of rents depend on
realized state -
234.3.3. Enforceability, Verifiability, and
Observability Implications if promises are
not-enforceable,
- Without enforcement, politicians claim high cost
and deliver nothing to voters- -Levithan state - Politicians will claim all y and taxesy
- Politicians will keep rents, r (theta)y
- No spending on g (theta) 0
244.4.1 Electoral Accountability and Elected
Incumbents Assumptions
- Opponent is identical in all aspects to
incumbent. - Voters punish incumbent for bad behavior and
reward for good behavior. - Timing
- 1) Cost of providing public goods is
realized and observed by all. - 2) Voters set a reservation utility for
reelecting incumbent. - 3) Incumbent sets policy qI
- 4) Elections are held between incumbent and
opponent. -
254.4.1 Electoral Accountability and Elected
Incumbents Implications
- If utility of voters is greater or equal to
reservation utility, probability incumbent is
reelected is 100. - Equilibrium rents are the same, irrespective of
the state of the world. - Politician maximizes rents, subject to
constraint that - . If current
future rents are greater than the amount he can
extract from taxes, he will spend on g. If not,
he will keep all of taxes for himself. The
optimal amount of rents
264.4.1 Electoral Accountability and Elected
Incumbents Implications
- If voters coordinate their vote and set their
optimal strategy, they can obtain the optimal
level of public goods in every state. However,
voters utility is state contingent. Voters set
utility equal to the average reservation utility
for given state of the world - Where equilibrium rents, decreasing with cost of
rent extraction and increasing with exogenous
value of public office, R -
274.4.2 Electoral Accountability and Asymmetric
Information Assumptions
- Opponent is identical in all aspects to
incumbent. - Voters punish incumbent for bad behavior and
reward for good behavior, but do not have
information on state of world that is realized. - Timing
- 1) Cost of providing public goods is
realized, only incumbents observe. - 2) Voters set a reservation utility for
reelecting incumbent. - 3) Incumbent sets policy qI
- 4) Elections are held between incumbent and
opponent. -
284.4.2 Electoral Accountability and Asymmetric
Information Implications
- If utility is greater than or equal to average
reservation utility, probability incumbent is
reelected is 100. - Supply of public goods depends on state of the
world, with lower levels of public goods as the
price of providing goods increases
294.4.2 Electoral Accountability and Asymmetric
Information Implications
- Equilibrium rents now depend on the state of the
world. If theta is the optimal outcome where
utility is equal to voters reservation utility,
rents will be greater
304.5 Electoral Accountability and Career Concerns
in a Two-Period Model Assumptions
- Taxes are fixed.
- The marginal utility from consumption is
constant, risk neutrality. - Government budget constraint is
-
- which are uniformly distributed
- Voters punish incumbent for bad behavior and
reward for good behavior, but do not have
information on state of world that is realized. - Timing
- 1) Incumbent in office in period 1 chooses rents
in period 1 without knowing his competence. - 2) The value of competence is realized.
- 3) Elections are held between incumbent and
opponent. - 4) Period 2 rents are set and public goods are
residually determined. -
314.5 Electoral Accountability and Career Concerns
- Roles of election
- 4.1 and 4.2 ? Select among economic policies
- 4.4 ? Hold incumbent accountable ex-post for bad
behavior - 4.5 ? Select the most competent or talented
politician - Additional Incentive to perform well
- Want to appear talented to the voters
- Past Economic performance as signal of future
competence - Electoral Cycles shortly before elections, the
incentives are higher to appear competent -
324.5.1 Electoral Accountability and Career
Concerns in a Two-Period Model Assumptions
- Taxes are fixed.
- The marginal utility from public consumption is
constant, risk neutrality. - Government budget constraint is
-
- which are uniformly distributed, with
- Voters can punish incumbent for bad behavior and
reward for good behavior, but do not have
information on state of world that is realized. - Objective function for politician at period 1
334.5.1 Electoral Accountability and Career
Concerns in a Two-Period Model
- Timing
- 1) Incumbent in office in period 1 chooses rents
in period 1 without knowing his own competence. - 2) The value of competence is realized.
- 3) Voters observe their utility, but not
competence neither rents - 4) Elections are held between incumbent and
opponent. - 5) Period 2 rents are set and public goods are
residually determined. - At period 2, there is no incentive for good
behavior - The higher the competence, the better off are the
voters
34Electoral Accountability and Career Concerns in a
Two-Period Model Implications
- Lets call
-
- as an estimate
to competence - he has
probability of winning reelection - He has to set r1 such that
-
354.5.2 Electoral Accountability and Career
Concerns in a Two-Period Model Implications
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