Public choice theory is listed under microeconomics in the JEL code. It is considered largely an issue of microeconomics, as well as the microeconomists who straddle the boundary between economics and political science. Starting from the 1970s, however, there has been an increasing number of macroeconomists researching on topics related to public choice-inspired macroeconomic models, and a few public choice scholars have discussed macroeconomic issues under the public choice framework. The difference is that the first group has attempted to separate themselves from the very label of “public choice” itself, adopting all manners of alternative labels (such as political macroeconomics, political economics, new political economy, among others)....