Effective governmental responses to disasters rely in part on the expertise and skills of government workers. Building and retaining expertise within the government often requires granting unelected civil servants discretion over policy-relevant decisions. We present a simple model of policy-making that captures the trade-offs faced by a policy-maker when considering implementing a policy that may reduce the level of expertise within the government in the shadow of a potential disaster in the future. The model illustrates how policy motivations of an elected government might lead to governmental failure in a response to a future disaster. The model predicts that governmental failures will be more likely when the policy-maker has relatively extreme preferences, and that the failures will tend to occur in agencies where the experts’ policy preferences are opposed to those of the policy-maker.
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11 March 2021
Research Article|
March 11 2021
Why Are Pandemics Ideological? Available to Purchase
Tom S. Clark;
Tom S. Clark
Department of Political Science, Emory University
USA
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John W. Patty
John W. Patty
Departments of Political Science and Quantitative Theory 8 Methods, Emory University
USA
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Online ISSN: 2689-4823
Print ISSN: 2689-4815
© 2020 T. S. Clark and J. W. Patty
2021
T. S. Clark and J. W. Patty
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy (2021) 2 (1): 103–141.
Citation
Clark TS, Patty JW (2021), "Why Are Pandemics Ideological?". Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Vol. 2 No. 1 pp. 103–141, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/113.00000032
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