The policy choices of governments are frequently durable. From the building of bridges to the creation of social programs, investments in public infrastructure typically last well beyond a single electoral cycle. In this paper we develop a dynamic model of repeated elections in which policy choices are durable. The behavior that emerges in equilibrium reveals a novel mechanism through which durability interacts with the shorter electoral cycle and distorts the incentives of politicians. We find that a government that is electorally accountable nevertheless underinvests in policy, that it deliberately wastes investment on projects that are never implemented, and that the type of policy it implements is itself Pareto inefficient. The first two distortions match evidence from infrastructure policy in western democracies, and the third identifies a distortion that has heretofore not been explored empirically. Notably, these effects emerge solely due to the interaction of policy durability and political accountability, and not from corruption, poor decision making, or voter myopia.
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16 May 2017
Research Article|
May 16 2017
Durable Policy, Political Accountability, and Active Waste
Steven Callander;
Steven Callander
Stanford University
, USA
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Davin Raiha
Davin Raiha
University of Western Ontario
, Canada
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*
For helpful comments we thank Pablo Montagnes, Avi Acharya, Al Slivinski, Dave Baron, Galina Zudenkova, several seminar audiences, and a particularly helpful referee of this journal.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2017 S. Callander and D. Raiha
2017
S. Callander and D. Raiha
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2017) 12 (1): 59–97.
Citation
Callander S, Raiha D (2017), "Durable Policy, Political Accountability, and Active Waste". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 12 No. 1 pp. 59–97, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00016120
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