Opportunistic electoral fiscal policy cycle theory suggests that all subnational officials will raise fiscal spending during elections. Ideological partisan fiscal policy cycle theory suggests that only left-leaning governments will raise election year fiscal spending, with right-leaning parties choosing the reverse. This study assesses which of these competing logics applies to debt policy choices. Cross-sectional time-series analysis of yearly loan acquisition across Mexican municipalities – on statistically matched municipal subsamples to balance creditworthiness across left- and right-leaning governments – shows that all parties engage in electoral policy cycles but not in the way originally thought. It also shows that different parties...
Theoretical literature seeking to explain public-debt accumulation exploded in recent years as debt ...
We propose a dynamic general equilibrium model that yields testable implications about the fiscal po...
Abstract: Theoretical literature seeking to explain public-debt accumulation exploded in recent year...
Do turnover and distributive partisan motivations affect government borrowing more so than tradition...
Public debt has traditionally been explained mainly by two political factors: a progressive ideology...
Some scholars argue that party leader considerations drive governors copartisan with presidents towa...
Public debt has traditionally been explained mainly by two political factors: a progressive ideology...
Research on subnational capital markets in developing nations has tended to focus on designing regul...
We show that voters are fiscal conservatives, although in the long run only: while the average (over...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
In this paper, we consider if extreme policies in terms of more polarized budgets can occur under th...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
Political economy theory expects politicians to use budget deficits to engineer an election-timed bo...
"Ergebnisse empirischer Forschung zum Thema regierungspolitischer und Budgetzyklen unterstützen eher...
AbstractThe aim of this paper is to analyze how the implementation of the Budgetary Stability Law ha...
Theoretical literature seeking to explain public-debt accumulation exploded in recent years as debt ...
We propose a dynamic general equilibrium model that yields testable implications about the fiscal po...
Abstract: Theoretical literature seeking to explain public-debt accumulation exploded in recent year...
Do turnover and distributive partisan motivations affect government borrowing more so than tradition...
Public debt has traditionally been explained mainly by two political factors: a progressive ideology...
Some scholars argue that party leader considerations drive governors copartisan with presidents towa...
Public debt has traditionally been explained mainly by two political factors: a progressive ideology...
Research on subnational capital markets in developing nations has tended to focus on designing regul...
We show that voters are fiscal conservatives, although in the long run only: while the average (over...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
In this paper, we consider if extreme policies in terms of more polarized budgets can occur under th...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
Political economy theory expects politicians to use budget deficits to engineer an election-timed bo...
"Ergebnisse empirischer Forschung zum Thema regierungspolitischer und Budgetzyklen unterstützen eher...
AbstractThe aim of this paper is to analyze how the implementation of the Budgetary Stability Law ha...
Theoretical literature seeking to explain public-debt accumulation exploded in recent years as debt ...
We propose a dynamic general equilibrium model that yields testable implications about the fiscal po...
Abstract: Theoretical literature seeking to explain public-debt accumulation exploded in recent year...