Federal Directives, Local Discretion and the Majority Rule

65 Pages Posted: 29 Nov 2013

See all articles by Antoine Loeper

Antoine Loeper

Charles III University of Madrid

Date Written: July 2, 2012

Abstract

I consider a heterogeneous federal system in which policy coordination is desirable but underprovided in the absence of a federal intervention. To improve policy coordination, the federal layer can intervene by imposing bounds on local policies. These federal bounds define a restricted policy space within which local jurisdictions have residual discretion. I analyze a voting game in which the federal bounds are determined directly by the citizens via federal majority rule.

The voting equilibrium exhibits various forms of inefficiencies. When the distribution of voters' ideal policy is skewed in one direction, the federal bounds are biased in the opposite direction. When the gains from policy coordination are negligible, local discretion is too limited, and a majority of voters are worse-off with the federal intervention than without. When policy coordination is more important, the federal intervention is supported by a majority of voters, but contrary to the received wisdom, it is socially worse than no intervention. Hence, the model shows that inadequate and excessively rigid federal interventions can emerge in a democratic federation without agency costs or informational imperfections.

Keywords: federalism, decentralization, local discretion, subsidiarity, majority rule, uncovered set

JEL Classification: H77, D72

Suggested Citation

Loeper, Antoine, Federal Directives, Local Discretion and the Majority Rule (July 2, 2012). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2361017 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2361017

Antoine Loeper (Contact Author)

Charles III University of Madrid ( email )

CL. de Madrid 126
Madrid, Madrid 28903
Spain

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
56
Abstract Views
787
Rank
803,295
PlumX Metrics