Article(electronic)June 4, 2013

Representative democracy and policy-making in the administrative state: is agency policy-making necessarily better?

In: Journal of public policy, Volume 33, Issue 2, p. 111-135

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Abstract

AbstractThis study focuses on how voters and politicians rationally select a preferred policy-making venue (Politician or Agency), and its implications for the principal-agent relationship between voters and politicians in a representative democracy. This study allows for incomplete information, as well as solving for the comparative static conditions pertaining to the extent that a politician's policy-making venue choices mirror those preferred by a representative voter. The comparative static results highlight when a politician (1) chooses the representative voter's preferred policy-making venue (ActiveorPassive Political Responsiveness); (2) is able to choose freely either policy-making venue without committing agency loss (Political Discretion); and (3) willing to deviate from the representative voter's preferred policy-making venue (Political Shirking). In contrast to the study by Spence, this study analytically demonstrates that one cannot infer that the benefits accrued from agency policy-making will necessarily exceed those from electoral institutions.

Languages

English

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

ISSN: 1469-7815

DOI

10.1017/s0143814x13000044

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