This article proposes a method to estimate relative ministerial weights in parliamentary democracies. Specifically, we present a bargaining model of government formation and estimate structural parameters of the model using data for (i) who the formateurs are, (ii) what each party's voting weight is, and (iii) what ministerial seats each party obtains. We also measure the effects of voting weights and formateur advantage on bargaining results. We apply our proposed method to the case of Japan. Our estimation results show that political players value pork-related posts (such as the Minister of Construction) much more than prestigious ones (such as the Minister of Foreign Affairs). We also find that there is a significant formateur advantage,...
Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? I...
The divide between government and opposition is clearly visible in the way members of parliament vot...
In this paper we propose a formal model of bargaining for govern-ment formation in a parliamentary d...
Over the last two decades a large and important literature has emerged that uses game theoretic mode...
This article expands our current knowledge about ministerial selection in coalition governments and ...
In this paper we estimate a bargaining model of government formation in parliamentary democracies. W...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when forming coalition governmen...
peer reviewedA standard conclusion of theorists who model bargaining as a non-cooperative game is th...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when form-ing coalition governme...
Following an election, Heads of State typically choose a formateur to report back a prospective gove...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2015.Prime ministers, as ...
Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? Influential the...
Politicians regularly bargain with colleagues and other actors. Bargaining dynamics are central to t...
In parliamentary democracies, the transfer of power from one government to the next is sometimes cha...
Models of government formation processes in multi-party democracies are unusually highly sensitive t...
Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? I...
The divide between government and opposition is clearly visible in the way members of parliament vot...
In this paper we propose a formal model of bargaining for govern-ment formation in a parliamentary d...
Over the last two decades a large and important literature has emerged that uses game theoretic mode...
This article expands our current knowledge about ministerial selection in coalition governments and ...
In this paper we estimate a bargaining model of government formation in parliamentary democracies. W...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when forming coalition governmen...
peer reviewedA standard conclusion of theorists who model bargaining as a non-cooperative game is th...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when form-ing coalition governme...
Following an election, Heads of State typically choose a formateur to report back a prospective gove...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2015.Prime ministers, as ...
Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? Influential the...
Politicians regularly bargain with colleagues and other actors. Bargaining dynamics are central to t...
In parliamentary democracies, the transfer of power from one government to the next is sometimes cha...
Models of government formation processes in multi-party democracies are unusually highly sensitive t...
Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? I...
The divide between government and opposition is clearly visible in the way members of parliament vot...
In this paper we propose a formal model of bargaining for govern-ment formation in a parliamentary d...