The Constraining, Liberating, and Informational Effects of Non-Binding Law
55 Pages Posted: 10 Jul 2013
Date Written: June 27, 2013
Abstract
We show that non-binding law can have a constraining effect on political leaders, because legal compliance is a costly signal to imperfectly informed voters that the leader is unbiased. Moreover, non-binding law can also have a liberating effect, enabling some leaders to take action when they otherwise would have done nothing. In addition, we illustrate how voters may face a trade-off between the legal standard that induces optimal behavior of the current leader (i.e., that most effectively addresses the moral hazard problem) and the legal standard that optimizes selection of future leaders (i.e., that most effectively addresses the adverse selection problem). We discuss a range of positive and normative implications that follow from our analysis.
Keywords: political agency, law, politics
JEL Classification: D72
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation