1991
DOI: 10.2307/1344630
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Political and Monetary Institutions and Public Financial Policies in the Industrial Countries

Abstract: Why do countries as similar as the industrialized OECD countries go through such different experience in terms of public deficits and debts or in terms of inflation? The answer cannot come from macroeconomic policy responses to different disturbances, nor from the principles of optimal taxation, but rather from politics. This article focuses on the role that particular institutions exert in providing constraints and incentives which shape the actions of policymakers. The electoral process and political traditi… Show more

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Cited by 1,206 publications
(917 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…21 Otherwise this variable would give as much weight to a change from 1 to 2 veto players as from 4 to 5; since our model speaks to the first case and is silent about the second, the log formulation is more appropriate. 22 See for example Alesina and Summers (1993), Cukierman, Webb, and Neyapti (1992) and Grilli, Masciandro and Tabellini (1991). 23 In contrast, in our Table 1 regressions the dependent variable, inflation, is not a direct measure of the frequency of policy change, and as a result, predictions about the effect of checks and balances on inflation depend on other intervening variables.…”
Section: Appendix 2: Derivation Of Expected Inflation Under Checks Anmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…21 Otherwise this variable would give as much weight to a change from 1 to 2 veto players as from 4 to 5; since our model speaks to the first case and is silent about the second, the log formulation is more appropriate. 22 See for example Alesina and Summers (1993), Cukierman, Webb, and Neyapti (1992) and Grilli, Masciandro and Tabellini (1991). 23 In contrast, in our Table 1 regressions the dependent variable, inflation, is not a direct measure of the frequency of policy change, and as a result, predictions about the effect of checks and balances on inflation depend on other intervening variables.…”
Section: Appendix 2: Derivation Of Expected Inflation Under Checks Anmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Otherwise, the first-period policy remains in place. 19 Hence, for each issue, a policy different from the status quo is implemented only if all the parties in office agree on it. 16 Ego rents are exogenously given and equal for each party in office.…”
Section: Political Equilibriummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…35 This ceiling" rate in the money market is established by the central bank analogously to the discount rate. The two o cial interest rates de ne a corridor that normally contains the every-day uctuations of all other moneymarket rates.…”
Section: The Italian Market For Bank Reservesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is motivated by the fact that Anticipazioni Ordinarie: a are of limited amount, established by the central bank; b should rationally be used rst as the least-costly source of nance; 36 and c can in principle be cancelled by the Bank of Italy with short notice. 37 In terms of innovations, the demand for xed-term advances can beexpressed as a positive function of the spread between the overnight rate and the rate on xed-term advances: 35 These xed-term advances are similar to Lombard loans in Germany. 36 In reality, though, this credit line is never completely used since many cash managers keep a portion of the line as a bu er stock.…”
Section: The Italian Market For Bank Reservesmentioning
confidence: 99%