Political economics
Work detail
What determines the size and form of redistributive programs, the extent and type of public goods provision, the burden of taxation across alternative tax bases, the size of government deficits, and the stance of monetary policy during the course of business and electoral cycles? A large and rapidly growing literature in political economics attempts to answer these questions. But so far there is little consensus on the answers and disagreement on the appropriate mode of analysis. Combining the best of three separate traditions -- the theory of macroeconomic policy, public choice, and rational choice in political science -- Torsten Persson and Guido Tabellini suggest a unified approach to the field. As in modern macroeconomics, individual citizens behave rationally, their preferences over economic outcomes inducing preferences over policy. As in public choice, the delegation of policy decisions to elected representatives may give rise to agency problems between voters and politicians. And, as in rational choice, political institutions shape the procedures for setting policy and electing politicians. The authors outline a common method of analysis, establish several new results, and identify the main outstanding problems. --back cover
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- Open Author
Guido Enrico Tabellini
- Open Author
Guido Tabellini
- Open Author
Guido Enrico Tabellini
- Open Author
Carl-Johann Dalgaard
- Open Author
Torsten Persson
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- Image source: Open LibraryPE
Political Economics
- Image source: Open LibraryPE
Political Economics
- PEPolitical EconomicsTorsten Persson, Guido Tabellini, Carl-Johann Dalgaard
Political Economics
- PEPolitical EconomicsTorsten Persson, Guido Tabellini
Political Economics
- PEPolitical EconomicsTorsten Persson, Guido Enrico Tabellini
Political Economics