Yardstick Competition and Political Agency Problems
U of London Queen Mary Economics Working Paper No. 441
27 Pages Posted: 19 Oct 2001
Date Written: October 2001
Abstract
This paper analyzes the role of yardstick competition for improving political decisions. We examine how performance comparisons across jurisdictions affect the agency problem resulting from uncertainty about politicians (adverse selection) and their policies (moral hazard). We study two forms of inefficiency: the provision of non-valuable programmes (over-provision) and the failure to provide valuable programmes (under-provision). We find a general neutrality result: yardstick competition does not affect the chance that at least one type of politician in one jurisdiction will take inefficient decision, nor does it affect the risk of underproviding good programmes. However, performance comparisons reduce the risk of providing bad programmes in both jurisdictions.
Keywords: Electoral competition, yardstick competition
JEL Classification: D72, H20, H71
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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