The divestiture of the House Appropriations Committee in the 1880's has received considerable attention of an empirical nature. This paper presents a formal model of legislative decisionmaking, using a common agency formulation to represent interest group lobbying of legislators. This framework is used to analyze the effects of decentralizing appropriations authority. The conditions under which decentralization leads to higher spending are characterized. It is argued that the conventional view that divestiture caused higher levels of spending only holds if decentralization created barriers to lobbying and political bargaining across different committees. In addition, the role of specialized committee knowledge is examined
Which government functions should be decentralized (resp. centralized) once lobbying behavior is tak...
The literature on the common pool resource problem in budgeting has thus far not explored the likely...
Concerns that democratic institutions are biased towards "special interests" and lobbyists are longs...
This paper analyzes whether the Congressional budget process (instituted in 1974) leads to lower agg...
This study examines the manner in which the House of Representatives has dealt with the appropriatio...
We study budget formation in a model featuring separation of powers. In our model, the legislature d...
This paper analyzes the impact of legislative committee structure on policy outcomes, comparing a `t...
Congress packages pork‐barrel spending in complicated proposals that belie theories of distributive ...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of a multimember legislature that decides on the al...
Richard Fenno, in Power of the Purse, contends that the budget process responds to interest group pr...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of multi-member legislatures. We show that a single...
Using extensive interview and committee testimony data across two contrasting sets of interests (env...
Which government functions should be decentralized (resp. centralized) once lobbying behavior is tak...
Recent theoretical work on the US Congress has focused on two different conceptions of the function ...
The literature on the organization of the United States Congress has been dominated by "distributive...
Which government functions should be decentralized (resp. centralized) once lobbying behavior is tak...
The literature on the common pool resource problem in budgeting has thus far not explored the likely...
Concerns that democratic institutions are biased towards "special interests" and lobbyists are longs...
This paper analyzes whether the Congressional budget process (instituted in 1974) leads to lower agg...
This study examines the manner in which the House of Representatives has dealt with the appropriatio...
We study budget formation in a model featuring separation of powers. In our model, the legislature d...
This paper analyzes the impact of legislative committee structure on policy outcomes, comparing a `t...
Congress packages pork‐barrel spending in complicated proposals that belie theories of distributive ...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of a multimember legislature that decides on the al...
Richard Fenno, in Power of the Purse, contends that the budget process responds to interest group pr...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of multi-member legislatures. We show that a single...
Using extensive interview and committee testimony data across two contrasting sets of interests (env...
Which government functions should be decentralized (resp. centralized) once lobbying behavior is tak...
Recent theoretical work on the US Congress has focused on two different conceptions of the function ...
The literature on the organization of the United States Congress has been dominated by "distributive...
Which government functions should be decentralized (resp. centralized) once lobbying behavior is tak...
The literature on the common pool resource problem in budgeting has thus far not explored the likely...
Concerns that democratic institutions are biased towards "special interests" and lobbyists are longs...