We suggest a probabilistic voting model where voters’ preferences for alternative public goods display habit formation. Current policies determine habit levels and in turn the future preferences of the voters. This allows the incumbent to act strategically in order to influence the probability of re-election. Comparing to a benchmark case of a certain re-election, we demonstrate that the incumbent’s optimal policy features both a more polarized allocation between the alternative public goods and a debt bias.budget deficits, voting, extremism, habit formation
We propose a dynamic general equilibrium model that yields testable implications about the fiscal po...
We model a two-parties electoral game in an environment where voters are imperfectly informed on the...
We present a model of political budget cycles in which incumbents influence voters by targeting gove...
We suggest a probabilistic voting model where voters’ preferences for alternative public goods displ...
In this paper, we consider if extreme policies in terms of more polarized budgets can occur under th...
Behavioral economics presents a “paternalistic” rationale for benevolent government intervention. T...
In this paper we present a framework showing how governments use debt to flaunt competency and incre...
An incumbent policy-maker can influence his successors' actions if current policies alter a state va...
Using the method of optimal control, when an incumbent politician derives utility from voting suppor...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
This paper proposes a dynamic politico-economic theory of debt, government finance and expenditure. ...
Behavioral economics presents a “paternalistic ” rationale for benev-olent government intervention. ...
We analyze a dynamic extension of a parsimonious model of lawmaking in which preferences evolve over...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
We model a society that values coherence between the long-term commitment of politicians to given le...
We propose a dynamic general equilibrium model that yields testable implications about the fiscal po...
We model a two-parties electoral game in an environment where voters are imperfectly informed on the...
We present a model of political budget cycles in which incumbents influence voters by targeting gove...
We suggest a probabilistic voting model where voters’ preferences for alternative public goods displ...
In this paper, we consider if extreme policies in terms of more polarized budgets can occur under th...
Behavioral economics presents a “paternalistic” rationale for benevolent government intervention. T...
In this paper we present a framework showing how governments use debt to flaunt competency and incre...
An incumbent policy-maker can influence his successors' actions if current policies alter a state va...
Using the method of optimal control, when an incumbent politician derives utility from voting suppor...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
This paper proposes a dynamic politico-economic theory of debt, government finance and expenditure. ...
Behavioral economics presents a “paternalistic ” rationale for benev-olent government intervention. ...
We analyze a dynamic extension of a parsimonious model of lawmaking in which preferences evolve over...
Why and under what conditions do governments borrow before elections? This thesis aims to shed light...
We model a society that values coherence between the long-term commitment of politicians to given le...
We propose a dynamic general equilibrium model that yields testable implications about the fiscal po...
We model a two-parties electoral game in an environment where voters are imperfectly informed on the...
We present a model of political budget cycles in which incumbents influence voters by targeting gove...