This article examines the role of the institutional power of executives in public budgeting; specifically, how executives change spending on particular budget items. Leveraging extant theories of the policy process concerning preference expression, attention, and institutions, we argue that executives deepen large cuts and boost large increases in budgetary change. The strictures of the budgetary process force trade‐offs for executives in preference expression such that increases to preferred categories typically require decreases in other categories. Literatures in public policy and political representation suggest that all executives would like to express fiscal preferences, thereby contributing to categorical budget oscillations; however...
We study budget formation in a model featuring separation of powers. In our model, the legislature d...
The design of budget rules and institutions, long a neglected area in public finance and macroeconom...
Prior research by Abney and Lauth concluded that governors were losing ground to legislatures in sha...
Existing studies underestimate the barriers to using the budgetary process as a mechanism for "...
comments and suggestions. In this paper, I present a distributive politics model based on Baron(1993...
In this article I use pooled time series data from more than 500 agencies in thirteen states to asse...
Presidential systems around the world vary in the proportion of legislators required to override an ...
Abstract. This paper studies politicians who have a present-bias for spending: they want to increase...
The George W. Bush administration’s Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) follows a sequence of pres...
Incrementalism is the dominant theory for explaining government decisions about policy and bud-gets,...
Can American presidents use their budget proposal authority to achieve their own partisan policy pri...
Recent proposals assume that endowing the U.S. President with a line item veto will reduce spending....
Dynamic agenda representation can be understood through the transmission of the priorities of the pu...
N the state budgeting literature, governors are portrayed as dominat-t ing the appropriations proces...
This article looks at the changed role of the OMB in American budget making. It argues for the re-es...
We study budget formation in a model featuring separation of powers. In our model, the legislature d...
The design of budget rules and institutions, long a neglected area in public finance and macroeconom...
Prior research by Abney and Lauth concluded that governors were losing ground to legislatures in sha...
Existing studies underestimate the barriers to using the budgetary process as a mechanism for "...
comments and suggestions. In this paper, I present a distributive politics model based on Baron(1993...
In this article I use pooled time series data from more than 500 agencies in thirteen states to asse...
Presidential systems around the world vary in the proportion of legislators required to override an ...
Abstract. This paper studies politicians who have a present-bias for spending: they want to increase...
The George W. Bush administration’s Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) follows a sequence of pres...
Incrementalism is the dominant theory for explaining government decisions about policy and bud-gets,...
Can American presidents use their budget proposal authority to achieve their own partisan policy pri...
Recent proposals assume that endowing the U.S. President with a line item veto will reduce spending....
Dynamic agenda representation can be understood through the transmission of the priorities of the pu...
N the state budgeting literature, governors are portrayed as dominat-t ing the appropriations proces...
This article looks at the changed role of the OMB in American budget making. It argues for the re-es...
We study budget formation in a model featuring separation of powers. In our model, the legislature d...
The design of budget rules and institutions, long a neglected area in public finance and macroeconom...
Prior research by Abney and Lauth concluded that governors were losing ground to legislatures in sha...