This paper tests the joint hypotheses that policymakers engage in fiscal policy opportunism and that voters respond by rewarding that opportunism with higher vote margins. Furthermore, it investigates the impact of fiscal illusion on the previous two dimensions. Empirical results, obtained with a sample of 68 countries from 1960 to 2006, reveal that opportunistic measures of expenditures and revenues generate larger winning margins for the incumbent and that the opportunistic manipulation of fiscal policy instruments is larger when the current government is less likely to be reelected. Furthermore, fiscal illusion contributes to the entrenchment of incumbent policymakers in office and promotes opportunistic behaviour.Fundação para a Ciência...
The literature on the rational political business cycle suggests that politicians systematically man...
We model a two-party electoral game with rationally inattentive voters. Parties are endowed with dif...
We model a two-party electoral game with rationally inattentive voters. Parties are endowed with dif...
This paper tests the joint hypotheses that policymakers engage in fiscal policy opportunism and that...
The literature on political business cycles suggests that politicians systematically manipulate econ...
We use data from gubernatorial elections in Brazil to test the electoral reactions of "sophisticated...
The literature on the rational political business cycle suggests that politicians systematically man...
The literature on the rational political business cycle suggests that politicians systematically man...
This article estimates the magnitude of fiscal illusion around the world and evaluates whether relat...
The paper examines government fiscal policy in a representative democracy under the conditions of fi...
The interpretation of the long-standing fiscal illusion hypothesis presented here is that the illusi...
This paper investigates the impact of elections on the level and composition of fiscal instruments u...
While economists argue that lower budget deficits are required in the developed countries, there is ...
This paper addresses two empirical questions. Is fiscal policy affected by upcoming elections? If so...
This paper addresses two empirical questions. Is fiscal policy affected by upcoming elections? If so...
The literature on the rational political business cycle suggests that politicians systematically man...
We model a two-party electoral game with rationally inattentive voters. Parties are endowed with dif...
We model a two-party electoral game with rationally inattentive voters. Parties are endowed with dif...
This paper tests the joint hypotheses that policymakers engage in fiscal policy opportunism and that...
The literature on political business cycles suggests that politicians systematically manipulate econ...
We use data from gubernatorial elections in Brazil to test the electoral reactions of "sophisticated...
The literature on the rational political business cycle suggests that politicians systematically man...
The literature on the rational political business cycle suggests that politicians systematically man...
This article estimates the magnitude of fiscal illusion around the world and evaluates whether relat...
The paper examines government fiscal policy in a representative democracy under the conditions of fi...
The interpretation of the long-standing fiscal illusion hypothesis presented here is that the illusi...
This paper investigates the impact of elections on the level and composition of fiscal instruments u...
While economists argue that lower budget deficits are required in the developed countries, there is ...
This paper addresses two empirical questions. Is fiscal policy affected by upcoming elections? If so...
This paper addresses two empirical questions. Is fiscal policy affected by upcoming elections? If so...
The literature on the rational political business cycle suggests that politicians systematically man...
We model a two-party electoral game with rationally inattentive voters. Parties are endowed with dif...
We model a two-party electoral game with rationally inattentive voters. Parties are endowed with dif...