In contrast to previous empirical work on electoral cycles, which implicitly assumes the executive has full discretion over fiscal policy, this paper contends that under separation of powers an unaligned legislature may have a moderating role. Focusing on the budget surplus, we find that stronger effective checks and balances explain why cycles are weaker in developed and established democracies. Once the discretional component of executive power is isolated, there are significant cycles in all democracies. Whether the political system is presidential or parliamentary, or the electoral rules are majoritarian or proportional, does not change the basic results.political budget cycles, asymmetric information, discretion, separation of powers, ...
In this paper, we study a model à la Rogoff (1990) where politicians distort fiscal policy to signal...
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...
In contrast to previous empirical work on electoral cycles, which implicitly assumes the executive h...
Abstract: In contrast to previous empirical work on electoral cycles, which implicitly assumes the e...
Previous empirical work on political budget cycles (PBCs) implicitly assumes the executive has full ...
We ask whether fiscal rules constrain incumbents from using fiscal policy tools for reelection purpo...
This paper examines the effects of elections on the conduct of central governments' fiscal policies....
This chapter reviews the literature on political budget cycles (PBCs), focusing on studies that anal...
What impact does party fragmentation have on the likelihood of democracies to run a fiscal deficit? ...
Recent literature suggests that electoral budget cycles are a phenomenon of new rather than establis...
This paper reconciles the long-standing debate on electorally motivated government spending by embed...
We investigate the effects of fiscal transparency and political polarization on the prevalence of el...
Voters often dismantle constitutional checks and balances on the executive. If such checks and balan...
This paper investigates the impact of elections on the level and composition of fiscal instruments u...
In this paper, we study a model à la Rogoff (1990) where politicians distort fiscal policy to signal...
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...
In contrast to previous empirical work on electoral cycles, which implicitly assumes the executive h...
Abstract: In contrast to previous empirical work on electoral cycles, which implicitly assumes the e...
Previous empirical work on political budget cycles (PBCs) implicitly assumes the executive has full ...
We ask whether fiscal rules constrain incumbents from using fiscal policy tools for reelection purpo...
This paper examines the effects of elections on the conduct of central governments' fiscal policies....
This chapter reviews the literature on political budget cycles (PBCs), focusing on studies that anal...
What impact does party fragmentation have on the likelihood of democracies to run a fiscal deficit? ...
Recent literature suggests that electoral budget cycles are a phenomenon of new rather than establis...
This paper reconciles the long-standing debate on electorally motivated government spending by embed...
We investigate the effects of fiscal transparency and political polarization on the prevalence of el...
Voters often dismantle constitutional checks and balances on the executive. If such checks and balan...
This paper investigates the impact of elections on the level and composition of fiscal instruments u...
In this paper, we study a model à la Rogoff (1990) where politicians distort fiscal policy to signal...
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...