政治集权与政府问责

Political Centralization and Government Accountability *

Quarterly Journal of Economics · 2015
被引 79
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

用一个政治代理模型解释了为何分权可能削弱问责,并回答了权力应集权还是分权、政府层级数量及边界划分等问题,发现信息异质性推动集权而偏好异质性推动分权。

Abstract

Abstract This article explains why decentralization can undermine accountability and answers three questions: what determines if power should be centralized or decentralized when regions are heterogeneous? How many levels of government should there be? How should state borders be drawn? We develop a model of political agency in which voters differ in their ability to monitor rent-seeking politicians. We find that rent extraction is a decreasing and convex function of the share of informed voters, because voter information improves monitoring but also reduces the appeal of holding office. As a result, information heterogeneity pushes toward centralization to reduce rent extraction. Taste heterogeneity pulls instead toward decentralization to match local preferences. Our model thus implies that optimal borders should cluster by tastes but ensure diversity of information. We also find economies of scope in accountability that explain why multiplying government tiers harms efficiency. A single government in charge of many policies has better incentives than many special-purpose governments splitting its budget and responsibilities. Hence, a federal system is desirable only if information varies enough across regions.

政治集权政府问责信息异质性最优边界