How do government budgets affect autocrats’ incentives to share or consolidate power? We estimate a dynamic decision problem in which autocrats build their ruling coalitions to maintain power and maximize rents amid fluctuating budgets. Even for unconstrained autocrats, we find that ousting (potential) rivals is costly and, when budgets are tight, reduces their short-term survival prospects. Despite these upfront costs, exclusion has dynamic benefits during periods of prolonged budget contraction: autocrats reduce patronage obligations that they may struggle to afford on a tighter budget, which increases their long-term survival chances and share of spoils. By contrast, budget upswings have lasting positive effects on power sharing. Our counterfactuals indicate that budget shocks comparable to those generated by recent commodity booms increase the probability of inclusive ruling coalitions by over 10 percentage points over 25 years. Case studies of Sudan and Liberia indicate that our model and results describe the tradeoffs and survival strategies of real-world autocrats.
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22 January 2024
Research Article|
January 22 2024
How Budgets Shape Power Sharing in Autocracies Available to Purchase
Darin Christensen;
Darin Christensen
Departments of Public Policy and Political Science, UCLA
USA
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Michael Gibilisco
Michael Gibilisco
Division of Humanities and Social Sciences, California Institute of Technology
USA
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* Thanks to Avi Acharya, Gretchen Helmke, Phil Hoffman, Gabriel Lopez-Moctezuma, Jack Paine, MaryClare Roche, Miguel Rueda, Jessica Steinberg, Francesco Trebbi, the editors, two anonymous referees, and audiences at APSA, Caltech, MPSA 2019 and the PKU Taxation and Fiscal Capacity Workshop.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2024 D. Christensen and M. Gibilisco
2024
D. Christensen and M. Gibilisco
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2024) 19 (1): 53–90.
Citation
Christensen D, Gibilisco M (2024), "How Budgets Shape Power Sharing in Autocracies". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 19 No. 1 pp. 53–90, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00021118
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