International audienceCan an incumbent political party increase its chances at re-election by implementing inefficient policies that harm its constituency? This paper studies the possibility of such a phenomenon, which we label political entrenchment. We use a two-party dynamic model of redistribution with probabilistic voting. Political entrenchment by the Left occurs only if incumbency rents are sufficiently high. Low-skill citizens may vote for this party even though they rationally expect the adoption of these policies. We discuss: the possibility of entrenchment by the Right; the scope for commitment to avoid entrenchment policies; and the effect of state capacity, income inequality and party popularity on the likelihood of entrenchmen...
This paper studies how electoral incentives influence the outcomes of political ne-gotiations. It co...
The economic voting literature has been dominated by the incumbency-oriented hypothesis, where voter...
We combine the well-established models of political agency and representative democracy to revisit t...
International audienceCan an incumbent political party increase its chances at re-election by implem...
We develop a theory of endogenous political entrenchment in a simple two-party dy-namic model of inc...
Democracies do not legally bind parties to their policy promises. Thus winning the power to set poli...
Political parties competing in elections for the power to set public policy face the problem of maki...
We present a theory of the emergence and persistence of inefficient states based on patronage politi...
This paper argues that legislative malapportionment, denoting a discrepancy between the share of leg...
In most countries with proportional representation systems, there is an election thresh-old, i.e., m...
We present a model of (re)elections in which an incumbency advantage arises because the incumbent ca...
This dissertation begins from a desire to explain situations in which left-wing parties appear to ad...
While income inequality is an important normative issue for students of democratic politics, little ...
This paper studies how electoral incentives influence the outcomes of political ne-gotiations. It co...
The economic voting literature has been dominated by the incumbency-oriented hypothesis, where voter...
We combine the well-established models of political agency and representative democracy to revisit t...
International audienceCan an incumbent political party increase its chances at re-election by implem...
We develop a theory of endogenous political entrenchment in a simple two-party dy-namic model of inc...
Democracies do not legally bind parties to their policy promises. Thus winning the power to set poli...
Political parties competing in elections for the power to set public policy face the problem of maki...
We present a theory of the emergence and persistence of inefficient states based on patronage politi...
This paper argues that legislative malapportionment, denoting a discrepancy between the share of leg...
In most countries with proportional representation systems, there is an election thresh-old, i.e., m...
We present a model of (re)elections in which an incumbency advantage arises because the incumbent ca...
This dissertation begins from a desire to explain situations in which left-wing parties appear to ad...
While income inequality is an important normative issue for students of democratic politics, little ...
This paper studies how electoral incentives influence the outcomes of political ne-gotiations. It co...
The economic voting literature has been dominated by the incumbency-oriented hypothesis, where voter...
We combine the well-established models of political agency and representative democracy to revisit t...