This paper presents a model portraying a country in a political deadlock about reform proposals that hurt strongly organized interest groups. We show that, under sorne circumstances (no ability to precommit, veto power by interest groups), only far reaching reforms (even if quite costly) have hope of success. The model intends to explain why in recent years several Latin American countries have gone for radical reform
Rational choice models predict that political competition and political participation have opposite ...
What explains policy-making in modern, representative democracies? In theory, voters select the parr...
Abstract: What are the determinants of economic reform efforts? This paper tries to throw light on t...
This paper presents a model portraying a country in a political deadlock about reform proposals that...
The wave of structural reforms in Latin America and elsewhere has stimulated the development of a wi...
The purpose of this paper is to test the main hypotheses of the recent theoretical literature on the...
Countries are often slow to adjust their economic structures to new necessities although this reform...
This paper contributes to literature on the process of reform in Latin America. We study political e...
Why are Colombia’s political institutions resistant against a neopopulist strategy to enact market r...
Why do entrenched interests so often oppose economic reform? This phenomenon is especially vexing be...
This paper develops a dynamic framework to analyze the political sustainability of economic reforms ...
This paper develops a dynamic framework to analyze the political sustainability of economic reforms ...
This chapter analyses reform over time across countries and sectors. Four scenarios for reforms are ...
Why are Colombia’s political institutions more resistant against a neopopulist strategy to enact mar...
Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Apart from the main authors, several researchers from both institutions hav...
Rational choice models predict that political competition and political participation have opposite ...
What explains policy-making in modern, representative democracies? In theory, voters select the parr...
Abstract: What are the determinants of economic reform efforts? This paper tries to throw light on t...
This paper presents a model portraying a country in a political deadlock about reform proposals that...
The wave of structural reforms in Latin America and elsewhere has stimulated the development of a wi...
The purpose of this paper is to test the main hypotheses of the recent theoretical literature on the...
Countries are often slow to adjust their economic structures to new necessities although this reform...
This paper contributes to literature on the process of reform in Latin America. We study political e...
Why are Colombia’s political institutions resistant against a neopopulist strategy to enact market r...
Why do entrenched interests so often oppose economic reform? This phenomenon is especially vexing be...
This paper develops a dynamic framework to analyze the political sustainability of economic reforms ...
This paper develops a dynamic framework to analyze the political sustainability of economic reforms ...
This chapter analyses reform over time across countries and sectors. Four scenarios for reforms are ...
Why are Colombia’s political institutions more resistant against a neopopulist strategy to enact mar...
Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Apart from the main authors, several researchers from both institutions hav...
Rational choice models predict that political competition and political participation have opposite ...
What explains policy-making in modern, representative democracies? In theory, voters select the parr...
Abstract: What are the determinants of economic reform efforts? This paper tries to throw light on t...