We investigate the effect of electoral rules and political regimes on fiscal policy outcomes in a panel of 61 democracies from 1960 and onwards. In presidential regimes, the size of government is smaller and less responsive to income shocks, compared to parliamentary regimes. Under majoritarian elections, social transfers are smaller and aggregate spending less responsive to income shocks than under proportional elections. Institutions also shape electoral cycles: only in presidential regimes is fiscal adjustment delayed until after the elections, and only in proportional and parliamentary systems do social transfers expand around elections. Several of these empirical regularities are in line with recent theoretical work; others are still a...
This paper examines the effect of political institutions on fiscal redistribution for a country-leve...
The paper examines electoral performance for incumbents in democratic regimes. I explore whether par...
We present a theoretical model of a parliamentary democracy where electoral com-petition inside coal...
We investigate the effect of electoral rules and political regimes on fiscal policy outcomes in a pa...
We investigate the effect of electoral rules and forms of government on fiscal policy outcomes in a ...
We investigate the effect of electoral rules and forms of government on scal policy outcomes in a l...
The political economy literature presents a number of models that explain how political institutions...
This paper addresses two empirical questions. Is fiscal policy affected by upcoming elections? If so...
The present work looks at the role of political institutions - political regimes and electoral rules...
We present a theoretical model of a parliamentary democracy, where party structures, government coal...
This chapter discusses recent theoretical and empirical research on one feature of modern democracie...
Electoral institutions should systematically affect the propensity of a country to rely and spend on...
Recent literature suggests that electoral budget cycles are a phenomenon of new rather than establis...
Until recently, most research on political budget cycles was based on the (often implicit) presumpti...
Until recently, most research on political budget cycles was based on the (often implicit) presumpti...
This paper examines the effect of political institutions on fiscal redistribution for a country-leve...
The paper examines electoral performance for incumbents in democratic regimes. I explore whether par...
We present a theoretical model of a parliamentary democracy where electoral com-petition inside coal...
We investigate the effect of electoral rules and political regimes on fiscal policy outcomes in a pa...
We investigate the effect of electoral rules and forms of government on fiscal policy outcomes in a ...
We investigate the effect of electoral rules and forms of government on scal policy outcomes in a l...
The political economy literature presents a number of models that explain how political institutions...
This paper addresses two empirical questions. Is fiscal policy affected by upcoming elections? If so...
The present work looks at the role of political institutions - political regimes and electoral rules...
We present a theoretical model of a parliamentary democracy, where party structures, government coal...
This chapter discusses recent theoretical and empirical research on one feature of modern democracie...
Electoral institutions should systematically affect the propensity of a country to rely and spend on...
Recent literature suggests that electoral budget cycles are a phenomenon of new rather than establis...
Until recently, most research on political budget cycles was based on the (often implicit) presumpti...
Until recently, most research on political budget cycles was based on the (often implicit) presumpti...
This paper examines the effect of political institutions on fiscal redistribution for a country-leve...
The paper examines electoral performance for incumbents in democratic regimes. I explore whether par...
We present a theoretical model of a parliamentary democracy where electoral com-petition inside coal...