This study generates an econometric model of the allocation of political contributions by food firms. It combines information about food firms' total expenditures for political influence with the behavioral assumption of profit maximization to test the hypothesis that food manufacturing firms do not lobby against farm policies. The results support the hypothesis. The inferences are conditional on the effects observed in the sample. The conclusions from this analysis may not be widely generalizable, but they do inform hypotheses about the intentions of food firms that participate in the political market
This paper tests the Protection for Sale model in terms of the structure of protection and how reali...
This paper utilizes new data to evaluate the determinants of thc political influence of thirty-five ...
The paper tests a political economy theory of simultaneous government decision-making on income redi...
This study generates an econometric model of the allocation of political contributions by food firms...
This study generates an econometric model of the allocation of political contribu-tions by food firm...
This study adapts Ndayisenga and Kinsey's econometric model of the allocation of political campaign ...
This study tests the hypothesis that lobbying by food firms does not contravene United States farm p...
Abstract: This paper studies whether political campaign contributions influence agricultural protec...
The objective of this paper is to systematically incorporate lobbying in a microeconomic model of th...
This paper estimates a simple model of tariff formation for U.S. food manufacturing industries based...
Food and agriculture have been subject to heavy-handed government interventions throughout much of h...
This article examines the influence of campaign contributions on agricultural subsidies. Empirical r...
Several farm groups do not command enough votes in the u.s. House of Representatives to pass their p...
The majority of existing literature in trade politics finds support for the firm centric model in th...
Public choice describes a marketplace for political favors that could explain strong support for agr...
This paper tests the Protection for Sale model in terms of the structure of protection and how reali...
This paper utilizes new data to evaluate the determinants of thc political influence of thirty-five ...
The paper tests a political economy theory of simultaneous government decision-making on income redi...
This study generates an econometric model of the allocation of political contributions by food firms...
This study generates an econometric model of the allocation of political contribu-tions by food firm...
This study adapts Ndayisenga and Kinsey's econometric model of the allocation of political campaign ...
This study tests the hypothesis that lobbying by food firms does not contravene United States farm p...
Abstract: This paper studies whether political campaign contributions influence agricultural protec...
The objective of this paper is to systematically incorporate lobbying in a microeconomic model of th...
This paper estimates a simple model of tariff formation for U.S. food manufacturing industries based...
Food and agriculture have been subject to heavy-handed government interventions throughout much of h...
This article examines the influence of campaign contributions on agricultural subsidies. Empirical r...
Several farm groups do not command enough votes in the u.s. House of Representatives to pass their p...
The majority of existing literature in trade politics finds support for the firm centric model in th...
Public choice describes a marketplace for political favors that could explain strong support for agr...
This paper tests the Protection for Sale model in terms of the structure of protection and how reali...
This paper utilizes new data to evaluate the determinants of thc political influence of thirty-five ...
The paper tests a political economy theory of simultaneous government decision-making on income redi...