Gridlock, leverage, and policy bundling


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Author / Producer

Date

2022-08

Publication Type

Journal Article, Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

no

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

I consider a dynamic model of bargaining where alternatives to the status quo arrive stochastically during the bargaining process, the proposer can bundle multiple alternatives into a single proposal, and a forward-looking voter elects the agenda-setter. I show that the prevailing wisdom that policy bundling reduces gridlock—by facilitating compromise across different policy areas—is incomplete. Policy bundling can also increase gridlock: a player may veto or delay a bipartisan alternative, which is unanimously preferred to the status quo, so that in the future they can bundle this same alternative with a divisive alternative that otherwise would not pass. Gridlock of this form is more likely to occur during periods of economic or political stability and, when it occurs, suggests that traditional measures of legislator ideology will overstate polarization. From the voter’s perspective, gridlock occurs at an inefficiently high frequency. This state of "excess gridlock" is driven by the voter being forward-looking and lacking commitment power.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

212

Pages / Article No.

104687

Publisher

Elsevier

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Gridlock; Bargaining; Policy bundling; Omnibus legislating

Organisational unit

09768 - Lee, Barton E. / Lee, Barton E. check_circle

Notes

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