Why do bureaucratic principals appoint agents who hold different policy views from themselves? We posit an explanation based on the interplay between two types of agency costs: shirking on information production and policy bias. Principals employ biased agents because they shirk less. This creates an incentive for the principal to use review mechanisms that mitigate the resulting bias in the agents’ decisions. The availability of such review mechanisms encourages principals to employ more extreme agents. We apply the theory to explain various features of the administrative state. In contrast to existing accounts, in our model the use by the president of ideological bureaucrats at regulatory agencies and centralized regulatory review are com...
Political principals typically use low-cost “fire-alarm” signals transmitted by the media, interest ...
This paper studies the selection of information collecting agents by policy makers in the light of t...
Government agencies service interest groups, advocate policies, provide advice to elected officials,...
Why do bureaucratic principals appoint agents who hold different policy views from themselves? We po...
Behavioral economics (BE) examines the implications for decision-making when actors suffer from bias...
I examine a model in which multiple legislative principals monitor a bureau-cratic agent’s implement...
A central problem of representative democracy is how to ensure that policy decisions are responsive ...
Theories of delegation posit that politicians have the incentive to decrease discretion when ideolog...
There is a natural tension between theories of party government and theories of regulatory politics....
We analyze the positive and normative implications of regulatory oversight when the policymaking age...
Ex post review is a common feature of policy-making institutions. We consider an environment in whic...
Do agency officials hold influence over the policy decisions made by state legislators and gov-ernor...
Government agencies service interest groups, advocate policies, provide advice to elected officials,...
A major issue in the study of American politics is the extent to which electoral discipline also con...
Although traditional models of bureaucratic politics have relied on the old assumption that infor-ma...
Political principals typically use low-cost “fire-alarm” signals transmitted by the media, interest ...
This paper studies the selection of information collecting agents by policy makers in the light of t...
Government agencies service interest groups, advocate policies, provide advice to elected officials,...
Why do bureaucratic principals appoint agents who hold different policy views from themselves? We po...
Behavioral economics (BE) examines the implications for decision-making when actors suffer from bias...
I examine a model in which multiple legislative principals monitor a bureau-cratic agent’s implement...
A central problem of representative democracy is how to ensure that policy decisions are responsive ...
Theories of delegation posit that politicians have the incentive to decrease discretion when ideolog...
There is a natural tension between theories of party government and theories of regulatory politics....
We analyze the positive and normative implications of regulatory oversight when the policymaking age...
Ex post review is a common feature of policy-making institutions. We consider an environment in whic...
Do agency officials hold influence over the policy decisions made by state legislators and gov-ernor...
Government agencies service interest groups, advocate policies, provide advice to elected officials,...
A major issue in the study of American politics is the extent to which electoral discipline also con...
Although traditional models of bureaucratic politics have relied on the old assumption that infor-ma...
Political principals typically use low-cost “fire-alarm” signals transmitted by the media, interest ...
This paper studies the selection of information collecting agents by policy makers in the light of t...
Government agencies service interest groups, advocate policies, provide advice to elected officials,...