Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this support goes to ailing sectors. We explain this with a lobbying model that allows for entry and sunk costs. Specifically, policy is influenced by pressure groups that incur lobbying expenses to create rents. In expanding industries, entry tends to erode such rents, but in declining industries, sunk costs rule out entry as long as the rents are not too high. This asymmetric appropriability of rents means losers lobby harder. Thus it is not that government policy picks losers, it is that losers pick government policy
Can multinational firms exert more power than national firms by influencing politics through lobbyin...
This paper re-examines the determinants of trade policy. It modifies the Grossman--Helpman model of ...
Revised for Journal ofRegulatory Economics Competition between two interest groups that engage In st...
Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this sup...
Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this sup...
Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this sup...
We model a setting in which citizens form coalitions to seek preferential entry to a given market. T...
This paper analyzes tax competition between politically-motivated governments in a world economy wit...
<p>This paper studies tax competition between two asymmetrical countries for an oligopolistic indust...
This paper examines the general-equilibrium effects of declining import prices on import and export ...
Financial liberalization under weak regulatory institutions is often followed by \u85nancial crises....
Regulatory caps on contributions to political campaigns are the cornerstones of campaign finance leg...
The paper explores the effect of protection lobbying by solving a firm's dynamic optimization proble...
This paper analyses the efficiency consequences of lobbying in a production economy with imperfect c...
Work in progress Please do not cite or circulate without permission This version: March 7, 2013 Rece...
Can multinational firms exert more power than national firms by influencing politics through lobbyin...
This paper re-examines the determinants of trade policy. It modifies the Grossman--Helpman model of ...
Revised for Journal ofRegulatory Economics Competition between two interest groups that engage In st...
Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this sup...
Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this sup...
Governments frequently intervene to support domestic industries, but a surprising amount of this sup...
We model a setting in which citizens form coalitions to seek preferential entry to a given market. T...
This paper analyzes tax competition between politically-motivated governments in a world economy wit...
<p>This paper studies tax competition between two asymmetrical countries for an oligopolistic indust...
This paper examines the general-equilibrium effects of declining import prices on import and export ...
Financial liberalization under weak regulatory institutions is often followed by \u85nancial crises....
Regulatory caps on contributions to political campaigns are the cornerstones of campaign finance leg...
The paper explores the effect of protection lobbying by solving a firm's dynamic optimization proble...
This paper analyses the efficiency consequences of lobbying in a production economy with imperfect c...
Work in progress Please do not cite or circulate without permission This version: March 7, 2013 Rece...
Can multinational firms exert more power than national firms by influencing politics through lobbyin...
This paper re-examines the determinants of trade policy. It modifies the Grossman--Helpman model of ...
Revised for Journal ofRegulatory Economics Competition between two interest groups that engage In st...