Form of government and voters’ preferences for public spending


METADATA ONLY
Loading...

Author / Producer

Date

2021-06

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric
METADATA ONLY

Data

Rights / License

Abstract

This paper examines the effect of local political decision-making institutions (i.e., citizens assembly vs. representative democracy) on citizens’ preferences toward public spending. Exogenous variation in institutions comes from a regression discontinuity design, which exploits a discrete change in the probability that a municipality has representative democracy based on a legally stipulated population threshold in the Swiss canton (state) of Vaud. Policies preferences by municipality are measured by vote shares on Swiss national referendums and initiatives that, if approved, would have increased public spending. Relative to direct democracy, representative democracy reduces vote shares in favor of spending by around 5 percentage points. The effect is unlikely due to sorting on other observables or to feedback from changes in local policies. These findings demonstrate the importance of preferences as a channel through which political decision-making institutions can affect public policies.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

186

Pages / Article No.

548 - 561

Publisher

Elsevier

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Voter preferences; Decision-making institutions; Switzerland; Direct democracy

Organisational unit

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets