When a government creates an agency to gather information relevant to policymaking, it faces two critical organizational questions: whether the agency should be given authority to decide on policy or merely supply advice, and what should the policy goals of the agency be. Existing literature on the first question is unable to address the second, because the question of authority becomes moot if the government can simply replicate its preferences within the agency. In contrast, this paper examines both questions within a model of policymaking under time inconsistency, a setting in which the government has a well-known incentive to create an agency with preferences that differ from its own. Thus, our framework permits a meaningful analysis of...
When are strategic appointments useful in curbing policy bias from ex-post negotiation between state...
Starting from the separation between formal and real authority, the paper considers a hierarchical r...
If there is no expert but bureaucracy in a policy area, expertise may be sufficient for an agency to...
When a government creates an agency to gather information relevant to policymaking, it faces two cri...
This paper studies how interest group lobbying of the bureaucracy affects policy outcomes and how it...
This paper considers a principal’s decision of whether to delegate au-thority to an informed agent o...
We generalize standard delegation models to consider policymaking when both information and authorit...
How should a principal delegate a task to an agent? This paper studies the choice of an agent's disc...
There are many situations in which a principal delegates decisions to a better-informed agent but do...
The President and the Senate bargain over the appointment of the Head of a key government department...
A large share of delegation models takes into account the effect of political disagreement when expl...
This paper analyzes, in a set-up where only the control over actions is contractible, the rationale ...
We model two aspects of executives in parliamentary democracies: Decision-making authority is assign...
A substantial literature has been devoted to analyzing how legislators delegate regulatory power to ...
Politicians typically do not know what policies are best for achieving their broad objectives, so re...
When are strategic appointments useful in curbing policy bias from ex-post negotiation between state...
Starting from the separation between formal and real authority, the paper considers a hierarchical r...
If there is no expert but bureaucracy in a policy area, expertise may be sufficient for an agency to...
When a government creates an agency to gather information relevant to policymaking, it faces two cri...
This paper studies how interest group lobbying of the bureaucracy affects policy outcomes and how it...
This paper considers a principal’s decision of whether to delegate au-thority to an informed agent o...
We generalize standard delegation models to consider policymaking when both information and authorit...
How should a principal delegate a task to an agent? This paper studies the choice of an agent's disc...
There are many situations in which a principal delegates decisions to a better-informed agent but do...
The President and the Senate bargain over the appointment of the Head of a key government department...
A large share of delegation models takes into account the effect of political disagreement when expl...
This paper analyzes, in a set-up where only the control over actions is contractible, the rationale ...
We model two aspects of executives in parliamentary democracies: Decision-making authority is assign...
A substantial literature has been devoted to analyzing how legislators delegate regulatory power to ...
Politicians typically do not know what policies are best for achieving their broad objectives, so re...
When are strategic appointments useful in curbing policy bias from ex-post negotiation between state...
Starting from the separation between formal and real authority, the paper considers a hierarchical r...
If there is no expert but bureaucracy in a policy area, expertise may be sufficient for an agency to...